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[PATCH 02/12] Make keywords' case follow to input
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* [PATCH 02/12] Make keywords' case follow to input
@ 2016-09-14 03:48 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2016-09-14 03:48 UTC (permalink / raw)

Currently some keywords suggested along with database objects are
always in upper case. This patch changes the behavior so that the case
of the additional keywords follow the setting of COMP_KEYWORD_CASE.

COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR needs completion_charp to be appendable, so this
patch changes it to a PQExpBuffer and adjust COMPLET_WITH_* macros to
that change.

Since COMPLETE_WITH_(QUERY|SCHEMA_QUERY|ATTR) are not given addons in
most cases so each of them are split into two macros that requires
addons (suffixed by _KW) and that don't.

This leaves keywords contained in Query_for_list_of_grant_roles and
Query_for_enum, but it is another problem.
---
 src/bin/psql/tab-complete-macros.h |  70 ++++++--
 src/bin/psql/tab-complete.c        | 358 ++++++++++++++++++++-----------------
 2 files changed, 246 insertions(+), 182 deletions(-)

diff --git a/src/bin/psql/tab-complete-macros.h b/src/bin/psql/tab-complete-macros.h
index 97ffcd1..44fd547 100644
--- a/src/bin/psql/tab-complete-macros.h
+++ b/src/bin/psql/tab-complete-macros.h
@@ -231,16 +231,46 @@
  * 5) The list of attributes of the given table (possibly schema-qualified).
  * 6) The list of arguments to the given function (possibly schema-qualified).
  */
-#define COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(query) \
+#define APPEND_COMP_CHARP(charp) \
+	appendPQExpBufferStr(completion_charp, charp);
+
+#define SET_COMP_CHARP(charp) \
+	resetPQExpBuffer(completion_charp);	\
+	APPEND_COMP_CHARP(charp);
+
+#define COMPLETION_CHARP (completion_charp->data)
+
+#define COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(query)				\
+do { \
+	SET_COMP_CHARP(query);	\
+	return completion_matches(text, complete_from_query);	\
+} while (0)
+
+/*
+ * COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY with additional keywords. Keywords are complete
+ * case-sensitively
+ */
+#define COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY_KW(query, addon)				\
 do { \
-	completion_charp = query;	\
+	SET_COMP_CHARP(query);	\
+	APPEND_COMP_CHARP(addon); \
 	return completion_matches(text, complete_from_query);	\
 } while (0)
 
-#define COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(query, addon) \
+#define COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(query) \
 do { \
 	completion_squery = &(query); \
-	completion_charp = addon; \
+	return completion_matches(text, complete_from_schema_query); \
+} while (0)
+
+/*
+ * COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY with additional keywords. Keywords are complete
+ * case-sensitively
+ */
+#define COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(query, addon)	\
+do { \
+	completion_squery = &(query); \
+	SET_COMP_CHARP(addon); \
 	return completion_matches(text, complete_from_schema_query); \
 } while (0)
 
@@ -260,12 +290,12 @@ do { \
 
 #define COMPLETE_WITH_CONST(string) \
 do { \
-	completion_charp = string;	\
+	SET_COMP_CHARP(string);	\
 	completion_case_sensitive = false; \
 	return completion_matches(text, complete_from_const);	\
 } while (0)
 
-#define COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(relation, addon) \
+#define COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR_KW(relation, addon) \
 do { \
 	char   *_completion_schema; \
 	char   *_completion_table; \
@@ -278,18 +308,22 @@ do { \
 								false, false, pset.encoding); \
 	if (_completion_table == NULL) \
 	{ \
-		completion_charp = Query_for_list_of_attributes addon; \
+		SET_COMP_CHARP(Query_for_list_of_attributes); \
+		APPEND_COMP_CHARP(addon);					  \
 		completion_info_charp = relation; \
 	} \
 	else \
 	{ \
-		completion_charp = Query_for_list_of_attributes_with_schema addon; \
+		SET_COMP_CHARP(Query_for_list_of_attributes_with_schema); \
+		APPEND_COMP_CHARP(addon); \
 		completion_info_charp = _completion_table; \
 		completion_info_charp2 = _completion_schema; \
 	} \
 	return completion_matches(text, complete_from_query); \
 } while (0)
 
+#define COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(query) COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR_KW((query), "")
+
 #define COMPLETE_WITH_ENUM_VALUE(type) \
 do { \
 	char   *_completion_schema; \
@@ -303,12 +337,12 @@ do { \
 							   false, false, pset.encoding);  \
 	if (_completion_type == NULL)\
 	{ \
-		completion_charp = Query_for_list_of_enum_values;	\
+		SET_COMP_CHARP(Query_for_list_of_enum_values);	\
 		completion_info_charp = type; \
 	} \
 	else \
 	{ \
-		completion_charp = Query_for_list_of_enum_values_with_schema;	\
+		SET_COMP_CHARP(Query_for_list_of_enum_values_with_schema);	\
 		completion_info_charp = _completion_type; \
 		completion_info_charp2 = _completion_schema; \
 	} \
@@ -328,12 +362,12 @@ do { \
 								   false, false, pset.encoding); \
 	if (_completion_function == NULL) \
 	{ \
-		completion_charp = Query_for_list_of_arguments; \
+		SET_COMP_CHARP(Query_for_list_of_arguments); \
 		completion_info_charp = function; \
 	} \
 	else \
 	{ \
-		completion_charp = Query_for_list_of_arguments_with_schema;	\
+		SET_COMP_CHARP(Query_for_list_of_arguments_with_schema); \
 		completion_info_charp = _completion_function; \
 		completion_info_charp2 = _completion_schema; \
 	} \
@@ -425,6 +459,16 @@ do { \
 	COMPLETE_WITH_LIST_CS(list); \
 } while (0)
 
-
+#define ADDLIST1(s1) additional_kw_query(text, 1, s1)
+#define ADDLIST2(s1, s2) additional_kw_query(text, 2, s1, s2)
+#define ADDLIST3(s1, s2, s3) additional_kw_query(text, 3, s1, s2, s3)
+#define ADDLIST4(s1, s2, s3, s4) \
+	additional_kw_query(text, 4, s1, s2, s3, s4)
+#define ADDLIST13(s1, s2, s3, s4, s5, s6, s7, s8, s9, s10, s11, s12, s13) \
+	additional_kw_query(text, 12, s1, s2, s3, s4, s5, s6, s7,		\
+						s8, s9, s10, s11, s12, s13)
+#define ADDLIST15(s1, s2, s3, s4, s5, s6, s7, s8, s9, s10, s11, s12, s13, s14, s15) \
+	additional_kw_query(text, 12, s1, s2, s3, s4, s5, s6, s7,		\
+						s8, s9, s10, s11, s12, s13, s14, s15)
 
 #endif   /* TAB_COMPLETE_MACROS_H */
diff --git a/src/bin/psql/tab-complete.c b/src/bin/psql/tab-complete.c
index 24669d0..21eb7ab 100644
--- a/src/bin/psql/tab-complete.c
+++ b/src/bin/psql/tab-complete.c
@@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ static int	completion_max_records;
  * Communication variables set by COMPLETE_WITH_FOO macros and then used by
  * the completion callback functions.  Ugly but there is no better way.
  */
-static const char *completion_charp;	/* to pass a string */
+static PQExpBuffer completion_charp = NULL;		/* to pass a string */
 static const char *const * completion_charpp;	/* to pass a list of strings */
 static const char *completion_info_charp;		/* to pass a second string */
 static const char *completion_info_charp2;		/* to pass a third string */
@@ -796,6 +796,7 @@ static char **complete_from_variables(const char *text,
 static char *complete_from_files(const char *text, int state);
 
 static char *pg_strdup_keyword_case(const char *s, const char *ref);
+static char *additional_kw_query( const char *ref, int n, ...);
 static char *escape_string(const char *text);
 static PGresult *exec_query(const char *query);
 
@@ -967,7 +968,8 @@ psql_completion(const char *text, int start, int end)
 #endif
 
 	/* Clear a few things. */
-	completion_charp = NULL;
+	if (completion_charp == NULL)
+		completion_charp = createPQExpBuffer();
 	completion_charpp = NULL;
 	completion_info_charp = NULL;
 	completion_info_charp2 = NULL;
@@ -1076,8 +1078,8 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 
 	/* ALTER TABLE */
 	if (Matches2("ALTER", "TABLE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables,
-								   "UNION SELECT 'ALL IN TABLESPACE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tables,
+									  ADDLIST1("ALL IN TABLESPACE"));
 
 	/* ALTER something */
 	if (Matches1("ALTER"))
@@ -1193,8 +1195,8 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 
 	/* ALTER INDEX */
 	if (Matches2("ALTER", "INDEX"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_indexes,
-								   "UNION SELECT 'ALL IN TABLESPACE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_indexes,
+									  ADDLIST1("ALL IN TABLESPACE"));
 	/* ALTER INDEX <name> */
 	if (Matches3("ALTER", "INDEX", MatchAny))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST4("OWNER TO", "RENAME TO", "SET", "RESET");
@@ -1222,8 +1224,8 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 
 	/* ALTER MATERIALIZED VIEW */
 	if (Matches3("ALTER", "MATERIALIZED", "VIEW"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_matviews,
-								   "UNION SELECT 'ALL IN TABLESPACE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_matviews,
+									  ADDLIST1("ALL IN TABLESPACE"));
 
 	/* ALTER USER,ROLE <name> */
 	if (Matches3("ALTER", "USER|ROLE", MatchAny) &&
@@ -1378,7 +1380,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	 * If we have ALTER TRIGGER <sth> ON, then add the correct tablename
 	 */
 	if (Matches4("ALTER", "TRIGGER", MatchAny, "ON"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables);
 
 	/* ALTER TRIGGER <name> ON <name> */
 	if (Matches5("ALTER", "TRIGGER", MatchAny, "ON", MatchAny))
@@ -1424,10 +1426,10 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	}
 	/* ALTER TABLE xxx INHERIT */
 	if (Matches4("ALTER", "TABLE", MatchAny, "INHERIT"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables);
 	/* ALTER TABLE xxx NO INHERIT */
 	if (Matches5("ALTER", "TABLE", MatchAny, "NO", "INHERIT"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables);
 	/* ALTER TABLE xxx DISABLE */
 	if (Matches4("ALTER", "TABLE", MatchAny, "DISABLE"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST3("ROW LEVEL SECURITY", "RULE", "TRIGGER");
@@ -1444,13 +1446,13 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 
 	/* ALTER TABLE xxx ALTER */
 	if (Matches4("ALTER", "TABLE", MatchAny, "ALTER"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev2_wd, " UNION SELECT 'COLUMN' UNION SELECT 'CONSTRAINT'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR_KW(prev2_wd, ADDLIST2("COLUMN", "CONSTRAINT"));
 
 	/* ALTER TABLE xxx RENAME */
 	if (Matches4("ALTER", "TABLE", MatchAny, "RENAME"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev2_wd, " UNION SELECT 'COLUMN' UNION SELECT 'CONSTRAINT' UNION SELECT 'TO'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR_KW(prev2_wd, ADDLIST3("COLUMN", "CONSTRAINT", "TO"));
 	if (Matches5("ALTER", "TABLE", MatchAny, "ALTER|RENAME", "COLUMN"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev3_wd, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev3_wd);
 
 	/* ALTER TABLE xxx RENAME yyy */
 	if (Matches5("ALTER", "TABLE", MatchAny, "RENAME", MatchAnyExcept("CONSTRAINT|TO")))
@@ -1465,7 +1467,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST2("COLUMN", "CONSTRAINT");
 	/* If we have ALTER TABLE <sth> DROP COLUMN, provide list of columns */
 	if (Matches5("ALTER", "TABLE", MatchAny, "DROP", "COLUMN"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev3_wd, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev3_wd);
 
 	/*
 	 * If we have ALTER TABLE <sth> ALTER|DROP|RENAME|VALIDATE CONSTRAINT,
@@ -1616,7 +1618,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	 * of attributes
 	 */
 	if (Matches5("ALTER", "TYPE", MatchAny, "ALTER|DROP|RENAME", "ATTRIBUTE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev3_wd, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev3_wd);
 	/* ALTER TYPE ALTER ATTRIBUTE <foo> */
 	if (Matches6("ALTER", "TYPE", MatchAny, "ALTER", "ATTRIBUTE", MatchAny))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("TYPE");
@@ -1653,9 +1655,10 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST4("WORK", "TRANSACTION", "TO SAVEPOINT", "PREPARED");
 /* CLUSTER */
 	if (Matches1("CLUSTER"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm, "UNION SELECT 'VERBOSE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tm,
+									  ADDLIST1("VERBOSE"));
 	if (Matches2("CLUSTER", "VERBOSE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm);
 	/* If we have CLUSTER <sth>, then add "USING" */
 	if (Matches2("CLUSTER", MatchAnyExcept("VERBOSE|ON")))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("USING");
@@ -1702,7 +1705,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables_for_constraint);
 	}
 	if (Matches4("COMMENT", "ON", "MATERIALIZED", "VIEW"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_matviews, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_matviews);
 	if (Matches4("COMMENT", "ON", "EVENT", "TRIGGER"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_event_triggers);
 	if (Matches4("COMMENT", "ON", MatchAny, MatchAnyExcept("IS")) ||
@@ -1717,11 +1720,11 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	 * backslash command).
 	 */
 	if (Matches1("COPY|\\copy"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables,
-								   " UNION ALL SELECT '('");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tables,
+									  ADDLIST1("("));
 	/* If we have COPY BINARY, complete with list of tables */
 	if (Matches2("COPY", "BINARY"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables);
 	/* If we have COPY (, complete it with legal commands */
 	if (Matches2("COPY|\\copy", "("))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST7("SELECT", "TABLE", "VALUES", "INSERT", "UPDATE", "DELETE", "WITH");
@@ -1733,7 +1736,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	if (Matches3("COPY|\\copy", MatchAny, "FROM|TO") ||
 			 Matches4("COPY", "BINARY", MatchAny, "FROM|TO"))
 	{
-		completion_charp = "";
+		SET_COMP_CHARP("");
 		return completion_matches(text, complete_from_files);
 	}
 
@@ -1802,21 +1805,20 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	 * existing indexes
 	 */
 	if (TailMatches2("CREATE|UNIQUE", "INDEX"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_indexes,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'ON'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'CONCURRENTLY'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_indexes,
+									  ADDLIST2("ON", "CONCURRENTLY"));
 	/* Complete ... INDEX|CONCURRENTLY [<name>] ON with a list of tables  */
 	if (TailMatches3("INDEX|CONCURRENTLY", MatchAny, "ON") ||
 			 TailMatches2("INDEX|CONCURRENTLY", "ON"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm);
 
 	/*
 	 * Complete CREATE|UNIQUE INDEX CONCURRENTLY with "ON" and existing
 	 * indexes
 	 */
 	if (TailMatches3("CREATE|UNIQUE", "INDEX", "CONCURRENTLY"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_indexes,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'ON'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_indexes,
+									  ADDLIST1("ON"));
 	/* Complete CREATE|UNIQUE INDEX [CONCURRENTLY] <sth> with "ON" */
 	if (TailMatches3("CREATE|UNIQUE", "INDEX", MatchAny) ||
 			 TailMatches4("CREATE|UNIQUE", "INDEX", "CONCURRENTLY", MatchAny))
@@ -1831,10 +1833,10 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST2("(", "USING");
 	if (TailMatches5("INDEX", MatchAny, "ON", MatchAny, "(") ||
 		TailMatches4("INDEX|CONCURRENTLY", "ON", MatchAny, "("))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev2_wd, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev2_wd);
 	/* same if you put in USING */
 	if (TailMatches5("ON", MatchAny, "USING", MatchAny, "("))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev4_wd, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev4_wd);
 	/* Complete USING with an index method */
 	if (TailMatches6("INDEX", MatchAny, MatchAny, "ON", MatchAny, "USING") ||
 			 TailMatches5("INDEX", MatchAny, "ON", MatchAny, "USING") ||
@@ -1851,7 +1853,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("ON");
 	/* Complete "CREATE POLICY <name> ON <table>" */
 	if (Matches4("CREATE", "POLICY", MatchAny, "ON"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables);
 	/* Complete "CREATE POLICY <name> ON <table> FOR|TO|USING|WITH CHECK" */
 	if (Matches5("CREATE", "POLICY", MatchAny, "ON", MatchAny))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST4("FOR", "TO", "USING (", "WITH CHECK (");
@@ -1889,7 +1891,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("TO");
 	/* Complete "AS ON <sth> TO" with a table name */
 	if (TailMatches4("AS", "ON", "SELECT|UPDATE|INSERT|DELETE", "TO"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables);
 
 /* CREATE SEQUENCE --- is allowed inside CREATE SCHEMA, so use TailMatches */
 	if (TailMatches3("CREATE", "SEQUENCE", MatchAny) ||
@@ -1945,47 +1947,47 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	 * tables
 	 */
 	if (TailMatches6("CREATE", "TRIGGER", MatchAny, "BEFORE|AFTER", MatchAny, "ON"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables);
 	/* complete CREATE TRIGGER ... INSTEAD OF event ON with a list of views */
 	if (TailMatches7("CREATE", "TRIGGER", MatchAny, "INSTEAD", "OF", MatchAny, "ON"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_views, NULL);
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches2("ON", MatchAny))
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_views);
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches2("ON", MatchAny))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST7("NOT DEFERRABLE", "DEFERRABLE", "INITIALLY",
 							"REFERENCING", "FOR", "WHEN (", "EXECUTE PROCEDURE");
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") &&
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") &&
 			 (TailMatches1("DEFERRABLE") || TailMatches2("INITIALLY", "IMMEDIATE|DEFERRED")))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST4("REFERENCING", "FOR", "WHEN (", "EXECUTE PROCEDURE");
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches1("REFERENCING"))
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches1("REFERENCING"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST2("OLD TABLE", "NEW TABLE");
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches2("OLD|NEW", "TABLE"))
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches2("OLD|NEW", "TABLE"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("AS");
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") &&
-			 (TailMatches5("REFERENCING", "OLD", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny) ||
-			  TailMatches4("REFERENCING", "OLD", "TABLE", MatchAny)))
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") &&
+		(TailMatches5("REFERENCING", "OLD", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny) ||
+		 TailMatches4("REFERENCING", "OLD", "TABLE", MatchAny)))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST4("NEW TABLE", "FOR", "WHEN (", "EXECUTE PROCEDURE");
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") &&
-			 (TailMatches5("REFERENCING", "NEW", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny) ||
-			  TailMatches4("REFERENCING", "NEW", "TABLE", MatchAny)))
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") &&
+		(TailMatches5("REFERENCING", "NEW", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny) ||
+		 TailMatches4("REFERENCING", "NEW", "TABLE", MatchAny)))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST4("OLD TABLE", "FOR", "WHEN (", "EXECUTE PROCEDURE");
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") &&
-			 (TailMatches9("REFERENCING", "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny, "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny) ||
-			  TailMatches8("REFERENCING", "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", MatchAny, "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny) ||
-			  TailMatches8("REFERENCING", "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny, "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", MatchAny) ||
-			  TailMatches7("REFERENCING", "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", MatchAny, "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", MatchAny)))
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") &&
+		(TailMatches9("REFERENCING", "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny, "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny) ||
+		 TailMatches8("REFERENCING", "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", MatchAny, "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny) ||
+		 TailMatches8("REFERENCING", "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", "AS", MatchAny, "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", MatchAny) ||
+		 TailMatches7("REFERENCING", "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", MatchAny, "OLD|NEW", "TABLE", MatchAny)))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST3("FOR", "WHEN (", "EXECUTE PROCEDURE");
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches1("FOR"))
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches1("FOR"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST3("EACH", "ROW", "STATEMENT");
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches2("FOR", "EACH"))
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches2("FOR", "EACH"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST2("ROW", "STATEMENT");
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") &&
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") &&
 			 (TailMatches3("FOR", "EACH", "ROW|STATEMENT") ||
 			  TailMatches2("FOR", "ROW|STATEMENT")))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST2("WHEN (", "EXECUTE PROCEDURE");
 	/* complete CREATE TRIGGER ... EXECUTE with PROCEDURE */
 	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches1("EXECUTE"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("PROCEDURE");
-	else if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches2("EXECUTE", "PROCEDURE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_functions, NULL);
+	if (HeadMatches2("CREATE", "TRIGGER") && TailMatches2("EXECUTE", "PROCEDURE"))
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_functions);
 
 /* CREATE ROLE,USER,GROUP <name> */
 	if (Matches3("CREATE", "ROLE|GROUP|USER", MatchAny) &&
@@ -2068,7 +2070,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("FROM");
 	/* Complete DELETE FROM with a list of tables */
 	if (TailMatches2("DELETE", "FROM"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_updatables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_updatables);
 	/* Complete DELETE FROM <table> */
 	if (TailMatches3("DELETE", "FROM", MatchAny))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST2("USING", "WHERE");
@@ -2106,10 +2108,10 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 
 	/* DROP INDEX */
 	if (Matches2("DROP", "INDEX"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_indexes,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'CONCURRENTLY'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_indexes,
+									  ADDLIST1("CONCURRENTLY"));
 	if (Matches3("DROP", "INDEX", "CONCURRENTLY"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_indexes, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_indexes);
 	if (Matches3("DROP", "INDEX", MatchAny))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST2("CASCADE", "RESTRICT");
 	if (Matches4("DROP", "INDEX", "CONCURRENTLY", MatchAny))
@@ -2119,7 +2121,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	if (Matches2("DROP", "MATERIALIZED"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("VIEW");
 	if (Matches3("DROP", "MATERIALIZED", "VIEW"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_matviews, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_matviews);
 
 	/* DROP OWNED BY */
 	if (Matches2("DROP", "OWNED"))
@@ -2225,7 +2227,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 /* FOREIGN TABLE */
 	if (TailMatches2("FOREIGN", "TABLE") &&
 			 !TailMatches3("CREATE", MatchAny, MatchAny))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_foreign_tables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_foreign_tables);
 
 /* FOREIGN SERVER */
 	if (TailMatches2("FOREIGN", "SERVER"))
@@ -2234,20 +2236,10 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 /* GRANT && REVOKE --- is allowed inside CREATE SCHEMA, so use TailMatches */
 	/* Complete GRANT/REVOKE with a list of roles and privileges */
 	if (TailMatches1("GRANT|REVOKE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_roles
-							" UNION SELECT 'SELECT'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'INSERT'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'UPDATE'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'DELETE'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'TRUNCATE'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'REFERENCES'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'TRIGGER'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'CREATE'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'CONNECT'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'TEMPORARY'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'EXECUTE'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'USAGE'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'ALL'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_roles,
+			ADDLIST13("SELECT", "INSERT", "UPDATE", "DELETE", "TRUNCATE",
+					  "REFERENCES", "TRIGGER", "CREATE", "CONNECT", "TEMPORARY",
+					  "EXECUTE", "USAGE", "ALL"));
 
 	/*
 	 * Complete GRANT/REVOKE <privilege> with "ON", GRANT/REVOKE <role> with
@@ -2275,22 +2267,22 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	 * privilege.
 	 */
 	if (TailMatches3("GRANT|REVOKE", MatchAny, "ON"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tsvmf,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'ALL FUNCTIONS IN SCHEMA'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'ALL SEQUENCES IN SCHEMA'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'DATABASE'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'DOMAIN'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'FOREIGN SERVER'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'FUNCTION'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'LANGUAGE'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'LARGE OBJECT'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'SCHEMA'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'SEQUENCE'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'TABLE'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'TABLESPACE'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'TYPE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tsvmf,
+			   ADDLIST15("ALL FUNCTIONS IN SCHEMA",
+						 "ALL SEQUENCES IN SCHEMA",
+						 "ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA",
+						 "DATABASE",
+						 "DOMAIN",
+						 "FOREIGN DATA WRAPPER",
+						 "FOREIGN SERVER",
+						 "FUNCTION",
+						 "LANGUAGE",
+						 "LARGE OBJECT",
+						 "SCHEMA",
+						 "SEQUENCE",
+						 "TABLE",
+						 "TABLESPACE",
+						 "TYPE"));
 
 	if (TailMatches4("GRANT|REVOKE", MatchAny, "ON", "ALL"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST3("FUNCTIONS IN SCHEMA", "SEQUENCES IN SCHEMA",
@@ -2310,21 +2302,21 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		if (TailMatches1("DATABASE"))
 			COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_databases);
 		if (TailMatches1("DOMAIN"))
-			COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_domains, NULL);
+			COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_domains);
 		if (TailMatches1("FUNCTION"))
-			COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_functions, NULL);
+			COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_functions);
 		if (TailMatches1("LANGUAGE"))
 			COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_languages);
 		if (TailMatches1("SCHEMA"))
 			COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_schemas);
 		if (TailMatches1("SEQUENCE"))
-			COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_sequences, NULL);
+			COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_sequences);
 		if (TailMatches1("TABLE"))
-			COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tsvmf, NULL);
+			COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tsvmf);
 		if (TailMatches1("TABLESPACE"))
 			COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tablespaces);
 		if (TailMatches1("TYPE"))
-			COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_datatypes, NULL);
+			COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_datatypes);
 		if (TailMatches4("GRANT", MatchAny, MatchAny, MatchAny))
 			COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("TO");
 		else
@@ -2388,10 +2380,10 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("INTO");
 	/* Complete INSERT INTO with table names */
 	if (TailMatches2("INSERT", "INTO"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_updatables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_updatables);
 	/* Complete "INSERT INTO <table> (" with attribute names */
 	if (TailMatches4("INSERT", "INTO", MatchAny, "("))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev2_wd, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev2_wd);
 
 	/*
 	 * Complete INSERT INTO <table> with "(" or "VALUES" or "SELECT" or
@@ -2415,10 +2407,10 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 /* LOCK */
 	/* Complete LOCK [TABLE] with a list of tables */
 	if (Matches1("LOCK"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'TABLE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tables,
+									  ADDLIST1("TABLE"));
 	if (Matches2("LOCK", "TABLE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables);
 
 	/* For the following, handle the case of a single table only for now */
 
@@ -2463,7 +2455,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	if (TailMatches3("FROM", MatchAny, "ORDER"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("BY");
 	if (TailMatches4("FROM", MatchAny, "ORDER", "BY"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev3_wd, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev3_wd);
 
 /* PREPARE xx AS */
 	if (Matches3("PREPARE", MatchAny, "AS"))
@@ -2492,10 +2484,10 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	if (Matches2("REFRESH", "MATERIALIZED"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("VIEW");
 	if (Matches3("REFRESH", "MATERIALIZED", "VIEW"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_matviews,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'CONCURRENTLY'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_matviews,
+									  ADDLIST1("CONCURRENTLY"));
 	if (Matches4("REFRESH", "MATERIALIZED", "VIEW", "CONCURRENTLY"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_matviews, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_matviews);
 	if (Matches4("REFRESH", "MATERIALIZED", "VIEW", MatchAny))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("WITH");
 	if (Matches5("REFRESH", "MATERIALIZED", "VIEW", "CONCURRENTLY", MatchAny))
@@ -2513,9 +2505,9 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	if (Matches1("REINDEX"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST5("TABLE", "INDEX", "SYSTEM", "SCHEMA", "DATABASE");
 	if (Matches2("REINDEX", "TABLE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm);
 	if (Matches2("REINDEX", "INDEX"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_indexes, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_indexes);
 	if (Matches2("REINDEX", "SCHEMA"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_schemas);
 	if (Matches2("REINDEX", "SYSTEM|DATABASE"))
@@ -2585,7 +2577,8 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST2("ONLY", "WRITE");
 	/* SET CONSTRAINTS */
 	if (Matches2("SET", "CONSTRAINTS"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_constraints_with_schema, "UNION SELECT 'ALL'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_constraints_with_schema,
+									  ADDLIST1("ALL"));
 	/* Complete SET CONSTRAINTS <foo> with DEFERRED|IMMEDIATE */
 	if (Matches3("SET", "CONSTRAINTS", MatchAny))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST2("DEFERRED", "IMMEDIATE");
@@ -2597,7 +2590,8 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_LIST2("AUTHORIZATION", "CHARACTERISTICS AS TRANSACTION");
 	/* Complete SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION with username */
 	if (Matches3("SET", "SESSION", "AUTHORIZATION"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_roles " UNION SELECT 'DEFAULT'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_roles,
+							   ADDLIST1("DEFAULT"));
 	/* Complete RESET SESSION with AUTHORIZATION */
 	if (Matches2("RESET", "SESSION"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("AUTHORIZATION");
@@ -2623,10 +2617,10 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 			COMPLETE_WITH_LIST(my_list);
 		}
 		if (TailMatches2("search_path", "TO|="))
-			COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_schemas
-								" AND nspname not like 'pg\\_toast%%' "
-								" AND nspname not like 'pg\\_temp%%' "
-								" UNION SELECT 'DEFAULT' ");
+			COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_schemas
+								   " AND nspname not like 'pg\\_toast%%' "
+								   " AND nspname not like 'pg\\_temp%%' ",
+								   ADDLIST1("DEFAULT"));
 		else
 		{
 			/* generic, type based, GUC support, guctype is malloc'ed */
@@ -2661,7 +2655,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 
 /* TABLE, but not TABLE embedded in other commands */
 	if (Matches1("TABLE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_relations, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_relations);
 
 /* TABLESAMPLE */
 	if (TailMatches1("TABLESAMPLE"))
@@ -2671,7 +2665,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 
 /* TRUNCATE */
 	if (Matches1("TRUNCATE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables);
 
 /* UNLISTEN */
 	if (Matches1("UNLISTEN"))
@@ -2680,13 +2674,13 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 /* UPDATE --- can be inside EXPLAIN, RULE, etc */
 	/* If prev. word is UPDATE suggest a list of tables */
 	if (TailMatches1("UPDATE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_updatables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_updatables);
 	/* Complete UPDATE <table> with "SET" */
 	if (TailMatches2("UPDATE", MatchAny))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("SET");
 	/* Complete UPDATE <table> SET with list of attributes */
 	if (TailMatches3("UPDATE", MatchAny, "SET"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev2_wd, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev2_wd);
 	/* UPDATE <table> SET <attr> = */
 	if (TailMatches4("UPDATE", MatchAny, "SET", MatchAny))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("=");
@@ -2695,10 +2689,8 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	if (Matches3("ALTER|CREATE|DROP", "USER", "MAPPING"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_CONST("FOR");
 	if (Matches4("CREATE", "USER", "MAPPING", "FOR"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_roles
-							" UNION SELECT 'CURRENT_USER'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'PUBLIC'"
-							" UNION SELECT 'USER'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_roles,
+			ADDLIST3("CURRENT_USER", "PUBLIC", "USER"));
 	if (Matches4("ALTER|DROP", "USER", "MAPPING", "FOR"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_user_mappings);
 	if (Matches5("CREATE|ALTER|DROP", "USER", "MAPPING", "FOR", MatchAny))
@@ -2711,29 +2703,26 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
  * VACUUM [ FULL | FREEZE ] [ VERBOSE ] ANALYZE [ table [ (column [, ...] ) ] ]
  */
 	if (Matches1("VACUUM"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'FULL'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'FREEZE'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'ANALYZE'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'VERBOSE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tm,
+									  ADDLIST4("FULL", "FREEZE",
+											   "ANALYZE", "VERBOSE"));
 	if (Matches2("VACUUM", "FULL|FREEZE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'ANALYZE'"
-								   " UNION SELECT 'VERBOSE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tm,
+									  ADDLIST2("ANALYZE", "VERBOSE"));
 	if (Matches3("VACUUM", "FULL|FREEZE", "ANALYZE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'VERBOSE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tm,
+									  ADDLIST1("VERBOSE"));
 	if (Matches3("VACUUM", "FULL|FREEZE", "VERBOSE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'ANALYZE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tm,
+									  ADDLIST1("ANALYZE"));
 	if (Matches2("VACUUM", "VERBOSE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'ANALYZE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tm,
+									  ADDLIST1("ANALYZE"));
 	if (Matches2("VACUUM", "ANALYZE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm,
-								   " UNION SELECT 'VERBOSE'");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY_KW(Query_for_list_of_tm,
+									  ADDLIST1("VERBOSE"));
 	if (HeadMatches1("VACUUM"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tm);
 
 /* WITH [RECURSIVE] */
 
@@ -2747,21 +2736,21 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 /* ANALYZE */
 	/* Complete with list of tables */
 	if (Matches1("ANALYZE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tmf, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tmf);
 
 /* WHERE */
 	/* Simple case of the word before the where being the table name */
 	if (TailMatches2(MatchAny, "WHERE"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev2_wd, "");
+		COMPLETE_WITH_ATTR(prev2_wd);
 
 /* ... FROM ... */
 /* TODO: also include SRF ? */
 	if (TailMatches1("FROM") && !Matches3("COPY|\\copy", MatchAny, "FROM"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tsvmf, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tsvmf);
 
 /* ... JOIN ... */
 	if (TailMatches1("JOIN"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tsvmf, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tsvmf);
 
 /* Backslash commands */
 /* TODO:  \dc \dd \dl */
@@ -2778,13 +2767,13 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 			COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_roles);
 	}
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\da*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_aggregates, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_aggregates);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dA*"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_access_methods);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\db*"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tablespaces);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dD*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_domains, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_domains);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\des*"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_servers);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\deu*"))
@@ -2792,7 +2781,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dew*"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_fdws);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\df*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_functions, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_functions);
 
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dFd*"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_ts_dictionaries);
@@ -2805,40 +2794,40 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_ts_configurations);
 
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\di*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_indexes, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_indexes);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dL*"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_languages);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dn*"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_schemas);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dp") || TailMatchesCS1("\\z"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tsvmf, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tsvmf);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\ds*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_sequences, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_sequences);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dt*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_tables);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dT*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_datatypes, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_datatypes);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\du*") || TailMatchesCS1("\\dg*"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_roles);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dv*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_views, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_views);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dx*"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_extensions);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dm*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_matviews, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_matviews);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dE*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_foreign_tables, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_foreign_tables);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\dy*"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_event_triggers);
 
 	/* must be at end of \d alternatives: */
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\d*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_relations, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_relations);
 
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\ef"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_functions, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_functions);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\ev"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_views, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_views);
 
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\encoding"))
 		COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_encodings);
@@ -2907,14 +2896,14 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 			COMPLETE_WITH_LIST_CS3("default", "verbose", "terse");
 	}
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\sf*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_functions, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_functions);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\sv*"))
-		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_views, NULL);
+		COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(Query_for_list_of_views);
 	if (TailMatchesCS1("\\cd|\\e|\\edit|\\g|\\i|\\include|"
 							"\\ir|\\include_relative|\\o|\\out|"
 							"\\s|\\w|\\write|\\lo_import"))
 	{
-		completion_charp = "\\";
+		SET_COMP_CHARP("\\");
 		return completion_matches(text, complete_from_files);
 	}
 
@@ -2934,8 +2923,7 @@ psql_completion_internal(const char *text, char **previous_words,
 				if (words_after_create[i].query)
 					COMPLETE_WITH_QUERY(words_after_create[i].query);
 				if (words_after_create[i].squery)
-					COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(*words_after_create[i].squery,
-											   NULL);
+					COMPLETE_WITH_SCHEMA_QUERY(*words_after_create[i].squery);
 				break;
 			}
 		}
@@ -3182,13 +3170,13 @@ _complete_from_query(int is_schema_query, const char *text, int state)
 							  char_length, e_text);
 
 			/* If an addon query was provided, use it */
-			if (completion_charp)
-				appendPQExpBuffer(&query_buffer, "\n%s", completion_charp);
+			if (COMPLETION_CHARP[0])
+				appendPQExpBuffer(&query_buffer, "\n%s", COMPLETION_CHARP);
 		}
 		else
 		{
 			/* completion_charp is an sprintf-style format string */
-			appendPQExpBuffer(&query_buffer, completion_charp,
+			appendPQExpBuffer(&query_buffer, COMPLETION_CHARP,
 							  char_length, e_text,
 							  e_info_charp, e_info_charp,
 							  e_info_charp2, e_info_charp2);
@@ -3303,18 +3291,17 @@ complete_from_list(const char *text, int state)
 static char *
 complete_from_const(const char *text, int state)
 {
-	Assert(completion_charp != NULL);
 	if (state == 0)
 	{
 		if (completion_case_sensitive)
-			return pg_strdup(completion_charp);
+			return pg_strdup(COMPLETION_CHARP);
 		else
 
 			/*
 			 * If case insensitive matching was requested initially, adjust
 			 * the case according to setting.
 			 */
-			return pg_strdup_keyword_case(completion_charp, text);
+			return pg_strdup_keyword_case(COMPLETION_CHARP, text);
 	}
 	else
 		return NULL;
@@ -3415,7 +3402,7 @@ complete_from_files(const char *text, int state)
 	if (state == 0)
 	{
 		/* Initialization: stash the unquoted input. */
-		unquoted_text = strtokx(text, "", NULL, "'", *completion_charp,
+		unquoted_text = strtokx(text, "", NULL, "'", COMPLETION_CHARP[0],
 								false, true, pset.encoding);
 		/* expect a NULL return for the empty string only */
 		if (!unquoted_text)
@@ -3436,7 +3423,7 @@ complete_from_files(const char *text, int state)
 		 * bother providing a macro to simplify this.
 		 */
 		ret = quote_if_needed(unquoted_match, " \t\r\n\"`",
-							  '\'', *completion_charp, pset.encoding);
+							  '\'', COMPLETION_CHARP[0], pset.encoding);
 		if (ret)
 			free(unquoted_match);
 		else
@@ -3480,6 +3467,39 @@ pg_strdup_keyword_case(const char *s, const char *ref)
 	return ret;
 }
 
+/* Construct codelet to append given keywords  */
+static char *
+additional_kw_query(const char *ref, int n, ...)
+{
+	va_list ap;
+	static PQExpBuffer qbuf = NULL;
+	int i;
+
+	if (qbuf == NULL)
+		qbuf = createPQExpBuffer();
+	else
+		resetPQExpBuffer(qbuf);
+
+	/* Construct an additional queriy to append keywords */
+	appendPQExpBufferStr(qbuf, " UNION ALL SELECT * FROM (VALUES ");
+
+	va_start(ap, n);
+	for (i = 0 ; i < n ; i++)
+	{
+		char *item = pg_strdup_keyword_case(va_arg(ap, char *), ref);
+		if (i > 0) appendPQExpBufferChar(qbuf, ',');
+		appendPQExpBufferStr(qbuf, "('");
+		appendPQExpBufferStr(qbuf, item);
+		appendPQExpBufferStr(qbuf, "')");
+		pg_free(item);
+	}
+	va_end(ap);
+
+	appendPQExpBufferStr(qbuf, ") as x");
+
+	return qbuf->data;
+}
+
 
 /*
  * escape_string - Escape argument for use as string literal.
-- 
2.9.2


----Next_Part(Mon_Nov_28_19_13_50_2016_736)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="0003-Introduce-word-shift-and-removal-feature-to-psql-com.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v42 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 569841398b..d5b26a51df 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9211,9 +9211,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index f043433e31..b98d47189f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7276,11 +7276,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7296,14 +7296,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7334,9 +7333,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8397,7 +8396,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8409,9 +8408,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 19d7bd2b28..3a1dc17057 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2329,12 +2329,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 98e1995453..4c1880bbc0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -637,7 +627,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1074,10 +1064,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1832,6 +1818,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5950,9 +5940,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 0aa35cf0c3..ad105cb2a6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.4


----Next_Part(Wed_Nov_11_10_07_22_2020_796)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v42-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v43 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 62711ee83f..fff553c6a5 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9223,9 +9223,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 4b60382778..e6bf21b450 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7299,11 +7299,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7319,14 +7319,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7357,9 +7356,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8420,7 +8419,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8432,9 +8431,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 19d7bd2b28..3a1dc17057 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2329,12 +2329,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 52a69a5366..a9cb25e3af 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -637,7 +627,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1074,10 +1064,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1832,6 +1818,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5989,9 +5979,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 0aa35cf0c3..ad105cb2a6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Dec_11_16_50_03_2020_915)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v43-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v37 5/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index de9bacd34f..69db5afc94 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9209,9 +9209,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 8eabf93834..cc5dc1173f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7192,11 +7192,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7212,14 +7212,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7250,9 +7249,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8313,7 +8312,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8325,9 +8324,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index beb309e668..45ec7ce68f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2366,12 +2366,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 4e0193a967..7a04d58a1a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -620,7 +610,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1057,10 +1047,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1815,6 +1801,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5738,9 +5728,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index e09ed0a4c3..71bb24accf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1290,11 +1290,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.4


----Next_Part(Fri_Sep_25_09_27_26_2020_419)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v37-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v38 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index de9bacd34f..69db5afc94 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9209,9 +9209,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 8eabf93834..cc5dc1173f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7192,11 +7192,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7212,14 +7212,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7250,9 +7249,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8313,7 +8312,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8325,9 +8324,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 42f01c515f..ec02e72dc0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2367,12 +2367,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 4e0193a967..7a04d58a1a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -620,7 +610,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1057,10 +1047,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1815,6 +1801,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5738,9 +5728,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index e09ed0a4c3..71bb24accf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1290,11 +1290,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.4


----Next_Part(Thu_Oct__1_09_07_22_2020_252)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v38-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v41 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 5fb9dca425..884dc12340 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9211,9 +9211,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index f043433e31..b98d47189f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7276,11 +7276,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7296,14 +7296,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7334,9 +7333,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8397,7 +8396,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8409,9 +8408,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 19d7bd2b28..3a1dc17057 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2329,12 +2329,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 98e1995453..4c1880bbc0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -637,7 +627,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1074,10 +1064,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1832,6 +1818,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5950,9 +5940,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 0aa35cf0c3..ad105cb2a6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.4


----Next_Part(Fri_Nov__6_09_27_56_2020_738)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v41-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v40 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 5fb9dca425..884dc12340 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9211,9 +9211,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index f043433e31..b98d47189f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7276,11 +7276,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7296,14 +7296,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7334,9 +7333,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8397,7 +8396,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8409,9 +8408,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 19d7bd2b28..3a1dc17057 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2329,12 +2329,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 98e1995453..4c1880bbc0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -637,7 +627,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1074,10 +1064,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1832,6 +1818,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5950,9 +5940,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 0aa35cf0c3..ad105cb2a6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.4


----Next_Part(Wed_Nov__4_17_39_10_2020_208)--
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v40-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v36 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 508bea3bc6..d30491d4f6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9208,9 +9208,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index c4ba49ffaf..530f41c194 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7190,11 +7190,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7210,14 +7210,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7248,9 +7247,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8311,7 +8310,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8323,9 +8322,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index beb309e668..45ec7ce68f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2366,12 +2366,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 673a0e73e4..dbf439891d 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -620,7 +610,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1057,10 +1047,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1815,6 +1801,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5738,9 +5728,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 0b2e2de87b..ad88efdfee 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1288,11 +1288,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.4


----Next_Part(Tue_Sep__8_17_55_57_2020_197)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v36-0007-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v35 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 128 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 91 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 700271fd40..fad9f94ddb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9177,9 +9177,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index aca8f73a50..679135c6b6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7113,11 +7113,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7133,14 +7133,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7171,9 +7170,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8234,7 +8233,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8246,9 +8245,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 65c3fc62a9..56ef2f56f6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2368,12 +2368,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 89662cc0a3..4973d69cfc 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    master server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   master process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   master process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,12 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   The activity statistics is placed on shared memory. When the server shuts
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +213,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -620,7 +611,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1060,10 +1051,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1788,6 +1775,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5739,9 +5730,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 2f0807e912..ce5c60de10 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1287,11 +1287,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.2


----Next_Part(Mon_Jun__8_17_32_04_2020_489)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v35-0007-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v33 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  29 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 133 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 91 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index ce33df9e58..20ee1d5a83 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -8161,9 +8161,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a14df06292..d04b2e796c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7096,11 +7096,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7116,14 +7116,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7154,9 +7153,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8217,7 +8216,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previous activity statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8230,7 +8229,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
         fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
+        activity statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
         the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 52e47379cc..7c8bac2bb2 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2360,12 +2360,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 6562cc400b..6653de82e8 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    master server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   master process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   master process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,12 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   The activity statistics is placed on shared memory. When the server shuts
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +213,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -603,7 +594,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -921,7 +912,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
       <tbody>
        <row>
-        <entry morerows="64"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
+        <entry morerows="65"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
         <entry><literal>ShmemIndexLock</literal></entry>
         <entry>Waiting to find or allocate space in shared memory.</entry>
        </row>
@@ -1204,6 +1195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to allocate or exchange a chunk of memory or update
          counters during Parallel Hash plan execution.</entry>
         </row>
+        <row>
+         <entry><literal>activity_statistics</literal></entry>
+         <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory
+         during transaction end or idle time.</entry>
+        </row>
         <row>
          <entry morerows="9"><literal>Lock</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>relation</literal></entry>
@@ -1251,7 +1247,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to acquire a pin on a buffer.</entry>
         </row>
         <row>
-         <entry morerows="12"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
+         <entry morerows="11"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>ArchiverMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of the archiver process.</entry>
         </row>
@@ -1279,10 +1275,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical launcher process.</entry>
         </row>
-        <row>
-         <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-         <entry>Waiting in main loop of the statistics collector process.</entry>
-        </row>
         <row>
          <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting for WAL from a stream at recovery.</entry>
@@ -4282,9 +4274,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index a9bc397165..a9289f84b0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1289,11 +1289,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.2


----Next_Part(Thu_Apr_30_13_22_05_2020_409)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v33-0007-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v57 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 5c9f4af1d5..795c042a3d 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9271,9 +9271,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 8603cf3f94..99a55d276d 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7398,11 +7398,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7418,14 +7418,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7456,9 +7455,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Mar_18_16_56_02_2021_947)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v57-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v31 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  29 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 133 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 91 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 64614b569c..8bd8fc4d5f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -8151,9 +8151,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index c4d6ed4bbc..ca737ee1fc 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7035,11 +7035,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7055,14 +7055,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7093,9 +7092,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8156,7 +8155,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previous activity statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8169,7 +8168,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
         fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
+        activity statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
         the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index b5d32bb720..b9b73e59f6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2381,12 +2381,13 @@ HINT:  Recovery cannot continue unless the configuration is changed and the serv
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index fd8b17ef8f..95b8c3a884 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    master server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   master process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   master process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,12 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   The activity statistics is placed on shared memory. When the server shuts
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +213,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -603,7 +594,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -921,7 +912,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
       <tbody>
        <row>
-        <entry morerows="64"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
+        <entry morerows="65"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
         <entry><literal>ShmemIndexLock</literal></entry>
         <entry>Waiting to find or allocate space in shared memory.</entry>
        </row>
@@ -1204,6 +1195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to allocate or exchange a chunk of memory or update
          counters during Parallel Hash plan execution.</entry>
         </row>
+        <row>
+         <entry><literal>activity_statistics</literal></entry>
+         <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory
+         during transaction end or idle time.</entry>
+        </row>
         <row>
          <entry morerows="9"><literal>Lock</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>relation</literal></entry>
@@ -1251,7 +1247,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to acquire a pin on a buffer.</entry>
         </row>
         <row>
-         <entry morerows="12"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
+         <entry morerows="11"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>ArchiverMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of the archiver process.</entry>
         </row>
@@ -1279,10 +1275,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical launcher process.</entry>
         </row>
-        <row>
-         <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-         <entry>Waiting in main loop of the statistics collector process.</entry>
-        </row>
         <row>
          <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting for WAL from a stream at recovery.</entry>
@@ -4282,9 +4274,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index a9bc397165..a9289f84b0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1289,11 +1289,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.2


----Next_Part(Fri_Apr__3_17_31_17_2020_104)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v31-0007-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v29 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  29 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 133 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 91 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 64614b569c..8bd8fc4d5f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -8151,9 +8151,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 2de21903a1..7ed2b3884c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7008,11 +7008,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7028,14 +7028,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7066,9 +7065,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8129,7 +8128,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previous activity statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8142,7 +8141,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
         fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
+        activity statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
         the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index b5d32bb720..b9b73e59f6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2381,12 +2381,13 @@ HINT:  Recovery cannot continue unless the configuration is changed and the serv
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 220b8164c3..efdcd6fda8 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    master server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   master process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   master process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,12 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   The activity statistics is placed on shared memory. When the server shuts
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +213,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -596,7 +587,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -914,7 +905,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
       <tbody>
        <row>
-        <entry morerows="64"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
+        <entry morerows="65"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
         <entry><literal>ShmemIndexLock</literal></entry>
         <entry>Waiting to find or allocate space in shared memory.</entry>
        </row>
@@ -1197,6 +1188,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to allocate or exchange a chunk of memory or update
          counters during Parallel Hash plan execution.</entry>
         </row>
+        <row>
+         <entry><literal>activity_statistics</literal></entry>
+         <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory
+         during transaction end or idle time.</entry>
+        </row>
         <row>
          <entry morerows="9"><literal>Lock</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>relation</literal></entry>
@@ -1244,7 +1240,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to acquire a pin on a buffer.</entry>
         </row>
         <row>
-         <entry morerows="12"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
+         <entry morerows="11"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>ArchiverMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of the archiver process.</entry>
         </row>
@@ -1272,10 +1268,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical launcher process.</entry>
         </row>
-        <row>
-         <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-         <entry>Waiting in main loop of the statistics collector process.</entry>
-        </row>
         <row>
          <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting for WAL from a stream at recovery.</entry>
@@ -4177,9 +4169,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index a9bc397165..a9289f84b0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1289,11 +1289,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.2


----Next_Part(Wed_Apr__1_15_15_11_2020_923)--
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v29-0007-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v57 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 5c9f4af1d5..795c042a3d 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9271,9 +9271,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 8603cf3f94..99a55d276d 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7398,11 +7398,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7418,14 +7418,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7456,9 +7455,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Mar_18_16_56_02_2021_947)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v57-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v44 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index d988636046..b9e4eb1040 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 4b60382778..e6bf21b450 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7299,11 +7299,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7319,14 +7319,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7357,9 +7356,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8420,7 +8419,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8432,9 +8431,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 19d7bd2b28..3a1dc17057 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2329,12 +2329,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 52a69a5366..a9cb25e3af 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -637,7 +627,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1074,10 +1064,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1832,6 +1818,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5989,9 +5979,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 0aa35cf0c3..ad105cb2a6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Mon_Dec_21_17_16_20_2020_608)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v44-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v39 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3927b1030d..87336e81ff 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9210,9 +9210,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index ee914740cc..b4537fc460 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7192,11 +7192,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7212,14 +7212,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7250,9 +7249,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8313,7 +8312,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8325,9 +8324,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 86da84fce7..24a42d1f44 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 171ba7049c..7c64cbc667 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -628,7 +618,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1065,10 +1055,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1823,6 +1809,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5797,9 +5787,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 1400cf8775..fd6c92b347 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1286,11 +1286,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.4


----Next_Part(Tue_Oct__6_10_06_44_2020_382)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v39-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v32 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  29 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 133 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 91 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 64614b569c..8bd8fc4d5f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -8151,9 +8151,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index c4d6ed4bbc..ca737ee1fc 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7035,11 +7035,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7055,14 +7055,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7093,9 +7092,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8156,7 +8155,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previous activity statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8169,7 +8168,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
         fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
+        activity statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
         the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index b5d32bb720..b9b73e59f6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2381,12 +2381,13 @@ HINT:  Recovery cannot continue unless the configuration is changed and the serv
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index fd8b17ef8f..95b8c3a884 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    master server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   master process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   master process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,12 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   The activity statistics is placed on shared memory. When the server shuts
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +213,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -603,7 +594,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -921,7 +912,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
       <tbody>
        <row>
-        <entry morerows="64"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
+        <entry morerows="65"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
         <entry><literal>ShmemIndexLock</literal></entry>
         <entry>Waiting to find or allocate space in shared memory.</entry>
        </row>
@@ -1204,6 +1195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to allocate or exchange a chunk of memory or update
          counters during Parallel Hash plan execution.</entry>
         </row>
+        <row>
+         <entry><literal>activity_statistics</literal></entry>
+         <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory
+         during transaction end or idle time.</entry>
+        </row>
         <row>
          <entry morerows="9"><literal>Lock</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>relation</literal></entry>
@@ -1251,7 +1247,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to acquire a pin on a buffer.</entry>
         </row>
         <row>
-         <entry morerows="12"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
+         <entry morerows="11"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>ArchiverMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of the archiver process.</entry>
         </row>
@@ -1279,10 +1275,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical launcher process.</entry>
         </row>
-        <row>
-         <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-         <entry>Waiting in main loop of the statistics collector process.</entry>
-        </row>
         <row>
          <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting for WAL from a stream at recovery.</entry>
@@ -4282,9 +4274,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index a9bc397165..a9289f84b0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1289,11 +1289,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.2


----Next_Part(Tue_Apr__7_16_38_17_2020_299)--
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v32-0007-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v33 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  29 +++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 128 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 88 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 9d8fa0bec3..4d93722af5 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9175,9 +9175,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 9f2a4a2470..b84e3f27b2 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7110,11 +7110,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7130,14 +7130,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7168,9 +7167,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8230,7 +8229,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previous activity statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8243,7 +8242,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
         fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
+        activity statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
         the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 44cc5d2116..c958337ac8 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2366,12 +2366,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 87502a49b6..94f5d21243 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    master server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   master process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   master process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,12 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   The activity statistics is placed on shared memory. When the server shuts
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +213,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -603,7 +594,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1038,10 +1029,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of the statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting for WAL from a stream at recovery.</entry>
@@ -1940,6 +1927,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>XidGenLock</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to allocate or assign a transaction id.</entry>
      </row>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>activity_statistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>async</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting for I/O on an async (notify) buffer.</entry>
@@ -5493,9 +5484,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 197b5c0d70..8e205f5b2b 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1289,11 +1289,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.2


----Next_Part(Fri_May_15_17_30_36_2020_111)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v33-0007-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v25 7/8] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  29 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 133 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 91 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index c6f95fa688..12c8d19ccb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -8135,9 +8135,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 3cac340f32..8cd86beb9d 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -6944,11 +6944,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -6964,14 +6964,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7002,9 +7001,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8022,7 +8021,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previous activity statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8035,7 +8034,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
         fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
+        activity statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
         the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index bc4d98fe03..d56afa17db 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2357,12 +2357,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 987580d6df..9605e0ebd4 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    master server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   master process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   master process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,12 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   The activity statistics is placed on shared memory. When the server shuts
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +213,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (500 ms unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -596,7 +587,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -914,7 +905,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
       <tbody>
        <row>
-        <entry morerows="64"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
+        <entry morerows="65"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
         <entry><literal>ShmemIndexLock</literal></entry>
         <entry>Waiting to find or allocate space in shared memory.</entry>
        </row>
@@ -1197,6 +1188,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to allocate or exchange a chunk of memory or update
          counters during Parallel Hash plan execution.</entry>
         </row>
+        <row>
+         <entry><literal>activity_statistics</literal></entry>
+         <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory
+         during transaction end or idle time.</entry>
+        </row>
         <row>
          <entry morerows="9"><literal>Lock</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>relation</literal></entry>
@@ -1244,7 +1240,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to acquire a pin on a buffer.</entry>
         </row>
         <row>
-         <entry morerows="13"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
+         <entry morerows="12"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>ArchiverMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of the archiver process.</entry>
         </row>
@@ -1272,10 +1268,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical launcher process.</entry>
         </row>
-        <row>
-         <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-         <entry>Waiting in main loop of the statistics collector process.</entry>
-        </row>
         <row>
          <entry><literal>RecoveryWalAll</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting for WAL from any kind of source (local, archive or stream) at recovery.</entry>
@@ -4156,9 +4148,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 13bd320b31..52c61d222a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1259,11 +1259,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.2


----Next_Part(Thu_Mar_19_20_30_04_2020_284)--
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v25-0008-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0dbe886f1d..15436c034b 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_12_10_39_2021_432)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v51-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_14_15_14_25_2021_903)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v46-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v30 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  29 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 133 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 91 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 64614b569c..8bd8fc4d5f 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -8151,9 +8151,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 2de21903a1..7ed2b3884c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7008,11 +7008,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7028,14 +7028,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7066,9 +7065,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8129,7 +8128,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previous activity statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8142,7 +8141,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
         fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
+        activity statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
         the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index b5d32bb720..b9b73e59f6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2381,12 +2381,13 @@ HINT:  Recovery cannot continue unless the configuration is changed and the serv
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 220b8164c3..efdcd6fda8 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    master server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   master process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   master process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,12 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   The activity statistics is placed on shared memory. When the server shuts
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +213,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -596,7 +587,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -914,7 +905,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
       <tbody>
        <row>
-        <entry morerows="64"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
+        <entry morerows="65"><literal>LWLock</literal></entry>
         <entry><literal>ShmemIndexLock</literal></entry>
         <entry>Waiting to find or allocate space in shared memory.</entry>
        </row>
@@ -1197,6 +1188,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to allocate or exchange a chunk of memory or update
          counters during Parallel Hash plan execution.</entry>
         </row>
+        <row>
+         <entry><literal>activity_statistics</literal></entry>
+         <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory
+         during transaction end or idle time.</entry>
+        </row>
         <row>
          <entry morerows="9"><literal>Lock</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>relation</literal></entry>
@@ -1244,7 +1240,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry>Waiting to acquire a pin on a buffer.</entry>
         </row>
         <row>
-         <entry morerows="12"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
+         <entry morerows="11"><literal>Activity</literal></entry>
          <entry><literal>ArchiverMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of the archiver process.</entry>
         </row>
@@ -1272,10 +1268,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
          <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical launcher process.</entry>
         </row>
-        <row>
-         <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-         <entry>Waiting in main loop of the statistics collector process.</entry>
-        </row>
         <row>
          <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
          <entry>Waiting for WAL from a stream at recovery.</entry>
@@ -4177,9 +4169,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index a9bc397165..a9289f84b0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1289,11 +1289,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.2


----Next_Part(Wed_Apr__1_17_37_23_2020_570)--
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
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 filename="v30-0007-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  25 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 85 insertions(+), 97 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index a218d78bef..53d7dfda93 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index db4b4e460c..90cf3072ac 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1086,10 +1076,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1852,6 +1838,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6128,9 +6118,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 5d5802f61d..b5a37b5e0c 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar_16_10_27_55_2021_500)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v56-0005-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 43d7a1ad90..179607fd5a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9245,9 +9245,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 82864bbb24..b0c25c9c5c 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index dc263e4106..f3ff7b6b6a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2365,12 +2365,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index f05140dd42..9c9dedb6b1 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6073,9 +6063,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Thu_Jan_21_12_03_48_2021_284)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v47-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_18_29_34_2021_806)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v50-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3513e127b7..a2dad90c91 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6071,9 +6061,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Mar__5_17_18_56_2021_497)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v48-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 96 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 967de73596..753b1ab6f9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8533,7 +8532,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 53692c0020..d4af6079aa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6061,9 +6051,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Tue_Mar__9_16_53_11_2021_575)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v49-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v34 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 128 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 91 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 700271fd40..fad9f94ddb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9177,9 +9177,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 4eef970d41..8da4b60fe9 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7113,11 +7113,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7133,14 +7133,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7171,9 +7170,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8234,7 +8233,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8246,9 +8245,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index 65c3fc62a9..56ef2f56f6 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2368,12 +2368,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 321a0f4bb1..374403a25a 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    master server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   master process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   master process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,12 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   The activity statistics is placed on shared memory. When the server shuts
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +213,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -620,7 +611,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1060,10 +1051,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1788,6 +1775,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5733,9 +5724,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index 197b5c0d70..8e205f5b2b 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1289,11 +1289,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.18.2


----Next_Part(Mon_Jun__1_18_00_01_2020_089)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v34-0007-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  34 ++++----
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 5 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 99 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index 3a2266526c..4d8b92df72 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9234,9 +9234,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 7c0a673a8d..f6c80df988 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7327,11 +7327,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7347,14 +7347,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7385,9 +7384,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8485,7 +8484,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
@@ -8497,9 +8496,10 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
         the index contains deleted pages that can be recycled during cleanup.
         Index statistics are considered to be stale if the number of newly
         inserted tuples exceeds the <varname>vacuum_cleanup_index_scale_factor</varname>
-        fraction of the total number of heap tuples detected by the previous
-        statistics collection. The total number of heap tuples is stored in
-        the index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
+
+        fraction of the total number of heap tuples in the previously
+        collected statistics. The total number of heap tuples is stored in the
+        index meta-page. Note that the meta-page does not include this data
         until <command>VACUUM</command> finds no dead tuples, so B-tree index
         scan at the cleanup stage can only be skipped if the second and
         subsequent <command>VACUUM</command> cycles detect no dead tuples.
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index efc382cb8d..6c620469eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2338,12 +2338,13 @@ LOG:  database system is ready to accept read only connections
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3cdb1aff3c..afa8c35127 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -196,18 +195,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -220,48 +212,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -643,7 +633,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1080,10 +1070,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1838,6 +1824,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -5996,9 +5986,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index dcb25dc3cd..7507783eaa 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Fri_Jan__8_10_24_34_2021_185)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v45-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector.
@ 2020-03-19 06:11 Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Kyotaro Horiguchi @ 2020-03-19 06:11 UTC (permalink / raw)

---
 doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml          |   6 +-
 doc/src/sgml/config.sgml            |  27 +++---
 doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml |  13 +--
 doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml        | 127 +++++++++++++---------------
 doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml       |   9 +-
 src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c |   2 -
 6 files changed, 86 insertions(+), 98 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
index b1de6d0674..0ef684d4d0 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/catalogs.sgml
@@ -9261,9 +9261,9 @@ SCRAM-SHA-256$<replaceable>&lt;iteration count&gt;</replaceable>:<replaceable>&l
   <para>
    <xref linkend="view-table"/> lists the system views described here.
    More detailed documentation of each view follows below.
-   There are some additional views that provide access to the results of
-   the statistics collector; they are described in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
+   There are some additional views that provide access to the activity
+   statistics; they are described in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
index 529876895b..99a8664026 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/config.sgml
@@ -7375,11 +7375,11 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
     <title>Run-time Statistics</title>
 
     <sect2 id="runtime-config-statistics-collector">
-     <title>Query and Index Statistics Collector</title>
+     <title>Query and Index Activity Statistics</title>
 
      <para>
-      These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
-      When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
+      These parameters control server-wide activity statistics features.
+      When activity statistics is enabled, the data that is produced can be
       accessed via the <structname>pg_stat</structname> and
       <structname>pg_statio</structname> family of system views.
       Refer to <xref linkend="monitoring"/> for more information.
@@ -7395,14 +7395,13 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables the collection of information on the currently
-        executing command of each session, along with the time when
-        that command began execution. This parameter is on by
-        default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not
-        visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning
-        the session being reported on, so it should not represent a
-        security risk.
-        Only superusers can change this setting.
+        Enables activity tracking on the currently executing command of
+        each session, along with the time when that command began
+        execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when
+        enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to
+        superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it
+        should not represent a security risk.  Only superusers can change this
+        setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
      </varlistentry>
@@ -7433,9 +7432,9 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       </term>
       <listitem>
        <para>
-        Enables collection of statistics on database activity.
+        Enables tracking of database activity.
         This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum
-        daemon needs the collected information.
+        daemon needs the activity information.
         Only superusers can change this setting.
        </para>
       </listitem>
@@ -8554,7 +8553,7 @@ COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
       <listitem>
        <para>
         Specifies the fraction of the total number of heap tuples counted in
-        the previous statistics collection that can be inserted without
+        the previously collected statistics that can be inserted without
         incurring an index scan at the <command>VACUUM</command> cleanup stage.
         This setting currently applies to B-tree indexes only.
        </para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
index f49f5c0108..45095857eb 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/high-availability.sgml
@@ -2217,12 +2217,13 @@ HINT:  You can then restart the server after making the necessary configuration
    </para>
 
    <para>
-    The statistics collector is active during recovery. All scans, reads, blocks,
-    index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the standby. Replayed
-    actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so replaying an
-    insert will not increment the Inserts column of pg_stat_user_tables.
-    The stats file is deleted at the start of recovery, so stats from primary
-    and standby will differ; this is considered a feature, not a bug.
+    The activity statistics is collected during recovery. All scans, reads,
+    blocks, index usage, etc., will be recorded normally on the
+    standby. Replayed actions will not duplicate their effects on primary, so
+    replaying an insert will not increment the Inserts column of
+    pg_stat_user_tables.  The activity statistics is reset at the start of
+    recovery, so stats from primary and standby will differ; this is
+    considered a feature, not a bug.
    </para>
 
    <para>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
index 3335d71eba..6217ed9792 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/monitoring.sgml
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@
   <para>
    Several tools are available for monitoring database activity and
    analyzing performance.  Most of this chapter is devoted to describing
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s statistics collector,
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s activity statistics,
    but one should not neglect regular Unix monitoring programs such as
    <command>ps</command>, <command>top</command>, <command>iostat</command>, and <command>vmstat</command>.
    Also, once one has identified a
@@ -53,7 +53,6 @@ postgres  15554  0.0  0.0  57536  1184 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: back
 postgres  15555  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: checkpointer
 postgres  15556  0.0  0.0  57536   916 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: walwriter
 postgres  15557  0.0  0.0  58504  2244 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: autovacuum launcher
-postgres  15558  0.0  0.0  17512  1068 ?        Ss   18:02   0:00 postgres: stats collector
 postgres  15582  0.0  0.0  58772  3080 ?        Ss   18:04   0:00 postgres: joe runbug 127.0.0.1 idle
 postgres  15606  0.0  0.0  58772  3052 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] SELECT waiting
 postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl regression [local] idle in transaction
@@ -65,9 +64,8 @@ postgres  15610  0.0  0.0  58772  3056 ?        Ss   18:07   0:00 postgres: tgl
    primary server process.  The command arguments
    shown for it are the same ones used when it was launched.  The next five
    processes are background worker processes automatically launched by the
-   primary process.  (The <quote>stats collector</quote> process will not be present
-   if you have set the system not to start the statistics collector; likewise
-   the <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process can be disabled.)
+   primary process.  (The <quote>autovacuum launcher</quote> process will not
+   be present if you have set the system not to start it.)
    Each of the remaining
    processes is a server process handling one client connection.  Each such
    process sets its command line display in the form
@@ -130,20 +128,21 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
  </sect1>
 
  <sect1 id="monitoring-stats">
-  <title>The Statistics Collector</title>
+  <title>The Activity Statistics</title>
 
   <indexterm zone="monitoring-stats">
    <primary>statistics</primary>
   </indexterm>
 
   <para>
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>statistics collector</firstterm>
-   is a subsystem that supports collection and reporting of information about
-   server activity.  Presently, the collector can count accesses to tables
-   and indexes in both disk-block and individual-row terms.  It also tracks
-   the total number of rows in each table, and information about vacuum and
-   analyze actions for each table.  It can also count calls to user-defined
-   functions and the total time spent in each one.
+   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname>'s <firstterm>activity
+   statistics</firstterm> is a subsystem that supports tracking and reporting
+   of information about server activity.  Presently, the activity statistics
+   tracks the count of accesses to tables and indexes in both disk-block and
+   individual-row terms.  It also tracks the total number of rows in each
+   table, and information about vacuum and analyze actions for each table.  It
+   can also track calls to user-defined functions and the total time spent in
+   each one.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -151,15 +150,15 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    information about exactly what is going on in the system right now, such as
    the exact command currently being executed by other server processes, and
    which other connections exist in the system.  This facility is independent
-   of the collector process.
+   of the activity statistics.
   </para>
 
  <sect2 id="monitoring-stats-setup">
-  <title>Statistics Collection Configuration</title>
+  <title>Activity Statistics Configuration</title>
 
   <para>
-   Since collection of statistics adds some overhead to query execution,
-   the system can be configured to collect or not collect information.
+   Since tracking for the activity statistics adds some overhead to query
+   execution, the system can be configured to track or not track activity.
    This is controlled by configuration parameters that are normally set in
    <filename>postgresql.conf</filename>.  (See <xref linkend="runtime-config"/> for
    details about setting configuration parameters.)
@@ -172,7 +171,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
 
   <para>
    The parameter <xref linkend="guc-track-counts"/> controls whether
-   statistics are collected about table and index accesses.
+   to track activity about table and index accesses.
   </para>
 
   <para>
@@ -201,18 +200,11 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The statistics collector transmits the collected information to other
-   <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> processes through temporary files.
-   These files are stored in the directory named by the
-   <xref linkend="guc-stats-temp-directory"/> parameter,
-   <filename>pg_stat_tmp</filename> by default.
-   For better performance, <varname>stats_temp_directory</varname> can be
-   pointed at a RAM-based file system, decreasing physical I/O requirements.
-   When the server shuts down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics
-   data is stored in the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that
-   statistics can be retained across server restarts.  When recovery is
-   performed at server start (e.g., after immediate shutdown, server crash,
-   and point-in-time recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
+   down cleanly, a permanent copy of the statistics data is stored in
+   the <filename>pg_stat</filename> subdirectory, so that statistics can be
+   retained across server restarts.  When recovery is performed at server
+   start (e.g. after immediate shutdown, server crash, and point-in-time
+   recovery), all statistics counters are reset.
   </para>
 
  </sect2>
@@ -225,48 +217,46 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    linkend="monitoring-stats-dynamic-views-table"/>, are available to show
    the current state of the system. There are also several other
    views, listed in <xref
-   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the results
-   of statistics collection.  Alternatively, one can
-   build custom views using the underlying statistics functions, as discussed
-   in <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
+   linkend="monitoring-stats-views-table"/>, available to show the activity
+   statistics.  Alternatively, one can build custom views using the underlying
+   statistics functions, as discussed in
+   <xref linkend="monitoring-stats-functions"/>.
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   When using the statistics to monitor collected data, it is important
-   to realize that the information does not update instantaneously.
-   Each individual server process transmits new statistical counts to
-   the collector just before going idle; so a query or transaction still in
-   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  Also, the collector itself
-   emits a new report at most once per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname>
-   milliseconds (500 ms unless altered while building the server).  So the
-   displayed information lags behind actual activity.  However, current-query
-   information collected by <varname>track_activities</varname> is
-   always up-to-date.
+   When using the activity statistics, it is important to realize that the
+   information does not update instantaneously.  Each individual server writes
+   out new statistical counts just before going idle, not frequent than once
+   per <varname>PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL</varname> milliseconds (1 second unless
+   altered while building the server); so a query or transaction still in
+   progress does not affect the displayed totals.  However, current-query
+   information tracked by <varname>track_activities</varname> is always
+   up-to-date.
   </para>
 
   <para>
    Another important point is that when a server process is asked to display
-   any of these statistics, it first fetches the most recent report emitted by
-   the collector process and then continues to use this snapshot for all
-   statistical views and functions until the end of its current transaction.
-   So the statistics will show static information as long as you continue the
-   current transaction.  Similarly, information about the current queries of
-   all sessions is collected when any such information is first requested
-   within a transaction, and the same information will be displayed throughout
-   the transaction.
-   This is a feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several
-   queries on the statistics and correlate the results without worrying that
-   the numbers are changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new
-   results with each query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction
-   block.  Alternatively, you can invoke
+   any of these statistics, it first reads the current statistics and then
+   continues to use this snapshot for all statistical views and functions
+   until the end of its current transaction.  So the statistics will show
+   static information as long as you continue the current transaction.
+   Similarly, information about the current queries of all sessions is tracked
+   when any such information is first requested within a transaction, and the
+   same information will be displayed throughout the transaction.  This is a
+   feature, not a bug, because it allows you to perform several queries on the
+   statistics and correlate the results without worrying that the numbers are
+   changing underneath you.  But if you want to see new results with each
+   query, be sure to do the queries outside any transaction block.
+   Alternatively, you can invoke
    <function>pg_stat_clear_snapshot</function>(), which will discard the
    current transaction's statistics snapshot (if any).  The next use of
    statistical information will cause a new snapshot to be fetched.
   </para>
-
+  
   <para>
-   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet untransmitted to the
-   collector) in the views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
+   A transaction can also see its own statistics (as yet unwritten to the
+   server-wide activity statistics) in the
+   views <structname>pg_stat_xact_all_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_sys_tables</structname>,
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_tables</structname>, and
    <structname>pg_stat_xact_user_functions</structname>.  These numbers do not act as
@@ -648,7 +638,7 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
    kernel's I/O cache, and might therefore still be fetched without
    requiring a physical read. Users interested in obtaining more
    detailed information on <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> I/O behavior are
-   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> statistics collector
+   advised to use the <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> activity statistics
    in combination with operating system utilities that allow insight
    into the kernel's handling of I/O.
   </para>
@@ -1085,10 +1075,6 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
       <entry><literal>LogicalLauncherMain</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of logical replication launcher process.</entry>
      </row>
-     <row>
-      <entry><literal>PgStatMain</literal></entry>
-      <entry>Waiting in main loop of statistics collector process.</entry>
-     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>RecoveryWalStream</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting in main loop of startup process for WAL to arrive, during
@@ -1843,6 +1829,10 @@ postgres   27093  0.0  0.0  30096  2752 ?        Ss   11:34   0:00 postgres: ser
     </thead>
 
     <tbody>
+     <row>
+      <entry><literal>ActivityStatistics</literal></entry>
+      <entry>Waiting to write out activity statistics to shared memory.</entry>
+     </row>
      <row>
       <entry><literal>AddinShmemInit</literal></entry>
       <entry>Waiting to manage an extension's space allocation in shared
@@ -6123,9 +6113,10 @@ SELECT pg_stat_get_backend_pid(s.backendid) AS pid,
      <entry><literal>performing final cleanup</literal></entry>
      <entry>
        <command>VACUUM</command> is performing final cleanup.  During this phase,
-       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update statistics
-       in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and report statistics to the statistics
-       collector.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command> will end.
+       <command>VACUUM</command> will vacuum the free space map, update
+       statistics in <literal>pg_class</literal>, and system-wide activity
+       statistics.  When this phase is completed, <command>VACUUM</command>
+       will end.
      </entry>
     </row>
    </tbody>
diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
index bcbb7a25fb..1fa59a2fdf 100644
--- a/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
+++ b/doc/src/sgml/ref/pg_dump.sgml
@@ -1280,11 +1280,10 @@ PostgreSQL documentation
   </para>
 
   <para>
-   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is
-   normally collected by the statistics collector.  If this is
-   undesirable, you can set parameter <varname>track_counts</varname>
-   to false via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER
-   USER</literal> command.
+   The database activity of <application>pg_dump</application> is normally
+   collected.  If this is undesirable, you can set
+   parameter <varname>track_counts</varname> to false
+   via <envar>PGOPTIONS</envar> or the <literal>ALTER USER</literal> command.
   </para>
 
  </refsect1>
diff --git a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
index 0abc41c33c..d74b5eed82 100644
--- a/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
+++ b/src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
@@ -6328,8 +6328,6 @@ restore_backend_variables(BackendParameters *param, Port *port)
 	if (postmaster_alive_fds[1] >= 0)
 		ReserveExternalFD();
 #endif
-	if (pgStatSock != PGINVALID_SOCKET)
-		ReserveExternalFD();
 }
 
 
-- 
2.27.0


----Next_Part(Wed_Mar_10_17_51_37_2021_192)--
Content-Type: Text/X-Patch; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline;
 filename="v52-0006-Remove-the-GUC-stats_temp_directory.patch"



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* Mingw task for Cirrus CI
@ 2022-02-25 16:44 Melih Mutlu <[email protected]>
  2022-03-22 00:15 ` Re: Mingw task for Cirrus CI Andres Freund <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 230+ messages in thread

From: Melih Mutlu @ 2022-02-25 16:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: pgsql-hackers

Hi All,

I've been working on adding Windows+MinGW environment into cirrus-ci tasks
(discussion about ci is here [1]).
It uses MSYS2 to set the environment. UCRT is chosen as C standard library,
instead of MSVCRT.
The task configures postgres with features that are available in MSYS2 (see
available packages [2]) and tap tests are enabled.
I already added the necessary docker image, you can find the related PR at
[3] and a successful cirruc-ci run with these changes at [4].
Attached patch adds a task runs on Windows with MinGW for cirrus-ci

However, I cannot run configure with --with-python, --with-perl or
--with-tcl.
There are two issues I encountered while trying to enable.  e.g. for
--with-python

1-  python_ldlibrary is set to "libpython3.9.dll.a". So the related line in
configure cannot retrieve "ldlibrary"
2-  src/pl/plpython/Makefile looks under "C:/Windows/system32/" for
PYTHONDLL. gendef cannot open that file, give an error like " failed to
open()" when creating a .def file.

To overcome those, I added the correct pattern to extract ldlibrary by
appending  "-e 's/\.dll.a$//'" at the end of the related line.
Then, I tried to use python dll from MSYS instead of windows/system32 by
changing PYTHONDLL path to "/ucrt64/bin/libpython3.9.dll". I'm not sure if
this is the correct dll.
Here is the diff of these two changes:

diff --git a/configure b/configure
index f3cb5c2b51..42ea580442 100755
--- a/configure
+++ b/configure
@@ -10536,7 +10536,7 @@ python_libdir=`${PYTHON} -c "import sysconfig;
print(' '.join(filter(None,syscon
 python_ldlibrary=`${PYTHON} -c "import sysconfig; print('
'.join(filter(None,sysconfig.get_config_vars('LDLIBRARY'))))"`

 # If LDLIBRARY exists and has a shlib extension, use it verbatim.
-ldlibrary=`echo "${python_ldlibrary}" | sed -e 's/\.so$//' -e 's/\.dll$//'
-e 's/\.dylib$//' -e 's/\.sl$//'`
+ldlibrary=`echo "${python_ldlibrary}" | sed -e 's/\.so$//' -e 's/\.dll$//'
-e 's/\.dylib$//' -e 's/\.sl$//' -e 's/\.dll.a$//'`
 if test -e "${python_libdir}/${python_ldlibrary}" -a
x"${python_ldlibrary}" != x"${ldlibrary}"
 then
        ldlibrary=`echo "${ldlibrary}" | sed "s/^lib//"`
diff --git a/src/pl/plpython/Makefile b/src/pl/plpython/Makefile
index a83ae8865c..4254ef94d7 100644
--- a/src/pl/plpython/Makefile
+++ b/src/pl/plpython/Makefile
@@ -61,7 +61,8 @@ INCS =        plpython.h \
 ifeq ($(PORTNAME), win32)

 pytverstr=$(subst .,,${python_version})
-PYTHONDLL=$(subst \,/,$(WINDIR))/system32/python${pytverstr}.dll
+#PYTHONDLL=$(subst \,/,$(WINDIR))/system32/python${pytverstr}.dll
+PYTHONDLL=/ucrt64/bin/libpython3.9.dll

 OBJS += libpython${pytverstr}.a



In the end, make check-world still fails, even though I was able to run
configure and make without any obvious error.
I see bunch of errors in tests like:
+ERROR:  language "plpython3u" does not exist
+HINT:  Use CREATE EXTENSION to load the language into the database.

Here is the logs from failed ci run:
https://api.cirrus-ci.com/v1/artifact/task/4645682031099904/log/build/src/pl/plpython/regression.dif...


Any thoughts on how postgres can be built with --with-python etc. on mingw?

Best,
Melih


[1]
https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/20211001222752.wrz7erzh4cajvgp6%40alap3.anarazel.de
<https://nam06.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.postgresql.org%2Fmessage-id%2F...;
[2] https://packages.msys2.org/package/
<https://nam06.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fpackages.msys2.org%2Fpackage%2F&am...;
[3] https://github.com/anarazel/pg-vm-images/pull/8
<https://nam06.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Fanarazel%2Fpg-vm-imag...;
[4] https://cirrus-ci.com/build/4999469182746624
<https://nam06.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcirrus-ci.com%2Fbuild%2F5013577319...;


Attachments:

  [application/octet-stream] 0001-Added-Windows-with-MinGW-environment-in-Cirrus-CI.patch (4.6K, ../../CAGPVpCSKS9E0An4=e7ZDnme+y=WOcQFJYJegKO8kE9=gh8NJKQ@mail.gmail.com/3-0001-Added-Windows-with-MinGW-environment-in-Cirrus-CI.patch)
  download | inline diff:
From 0ea1e22200e57538be61445c6ac8d4178e84832e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Melih Mutlu <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2022 14:46:05 +0300
Subject: [PATCH] Added Windows with MinGW environment in Cirrus CI

---
 .cirrus.yml | 85 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-----------
 1 file changed, 68 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-)

diff --git a/.cirrus.yml b/.cirrus.yml
index d10b0a82f9..67717039f2 100644
--- a/.cirrus.yml
+++ b/.cirrus.yml
@@ -23,7 +23,6 @@ env:
   CHECKFLAGS: -Otarget
   PROVE_FLAGS: --timer
   PGCTLTIMEOUT: 120 # avoids spurious failures during parallel tests
-  TEMP_CONFIG: ${CIRRUS_WORKING_DIR}/src/tools/ci/pg_ci_base.conf
   PG_TEST_EXTRA: kerberos ldap ssl
 
 
@@ -329,13 +328,31 @@ task:
     cores_script: src/tools/ci/cores_backtrace.sh macos "${HOME}/cores"
 
 
+WINDOWS_ENVIRONMENT_BASE: &WINDOWS_ENVIRONMENT_BASE
+    env:
+      # Half the allowed per-user CPU cores
+      CPUS: 4
+      # The default working dir is in a directory msbuild complains about
+      CIRRUS_WORKING_DIR: "c:/cirrus"
+      TEMP_CONFIG: ${CIRRUS_WORKING_DIR}/src/tools/ci/pg_ci_base.conf
+
+      # Avoids port conflicts between concurrent tap test runs
+      PG_TEST_USE_UNIX_SOCKETS: 1
+
+    only_if: $CIRRUS_CHANGE_MESSAGE !=~ '.*\nci-os-only:.*' || $CIRRUS_CHANGE_MESSAGE =~ '.*\nci-os-only:[^\n]*windows.*'
+
+    sysinfo_script: |
+      chcp
+      systeminfo
+      powershell -Command get-psdrive -psprovider filesystem
+      set
+
+
 task:
+  << : *WINDOWS_ENVIRONMENT_BASE
   name: Windows - Server 2019, VS 2019
 
   env:
-    # Half the allowed per-user CPU cores
-    CPUS: 4
-
     # Our windows infrastructure doesn't have test concurrency above the level
     # of a single vcregress test target. Due to that, it's useful to run prove
     # with multiple jobs. For the other tasks it isn't, because two sources
@@ -345,15 +362,11 @@ task:
     # likely can be improved upon further.
     PROVE_FLAGS: -j10 --timer
 
-    # The default cirrus working dir is in a directory msbuild complains about
-    CIRRUS_WORKING_DIR: "c:/cirrus"
     # Avoid re-installing over and over
     NO_TEMP_INSTALL: 1
     # git's tar doesn't deal with drive letters, see
     # https://postgr.es/m/b6782dc3-a7b0-ed56-175f-f8f54cb08d67%40dunslane.net
     TAR: "c:/windows/system32/tar.exe"
-    # Avoids port conflicts between concurrent tap test runs
-    PG_TEST_USE_UNIX_SOCKETS: 1
     PG_REGRESS_SOCK_DIR: "c:/cirrus/"
     # -m enables parallelism
     # verbosity:minimal + Summary reduce verbosity, while keeping a summary of
@@ -370,20 +383,11 @@ task:
     # "suites".
     T_C: "\"C:/Program Files/Git/usr/bin/timeout.exe\" -v -k60s 15m"
 
-
-  only_if: $CIRRUS_CHANGE_MESSAGE !=~ '.*\nci-os-only:.*' || $CIRRUS_CHANGE_MESSAGE =~ '.*\nci-os-only:[^\n]*windows.*'
-
   windows_container:
     image: $CONTAINER_REPO/windows_ci_vs_2019:latest
     cpu: $CPUS
     memory: 4G
 
-  sysinfo_script: |
-    chcp
-    systeminfo
-    powershell -Command get-psdrive -psprovider filesystem
-    set
-
   configure_script:
     # copy errors out when using forward slashes
     - copy src\tools\ci\windows_build_config.pl src\tools\msvc\config.pl
@@ -440,6 +444,53 @@ task:
       path: "crashlog-*.txt"
       type: text/plain
 
+task:
+  << : *WINDOWS_ENVIRONMENT_BASE
+  name: Windows - Server 2019, MinGW64
+  windows_container:
+    image: $CONTAINER_REPO/windows_ci_mingw64:latest
+    cpu: $CPUS
+    memory: 4G
+  env:
+    CCACHE_DIR: C:/msys64/ccache
+    BUILD_DIR: "%CIRRUS_WORKING_DIR%/build"
+
+  ccache_cache:
+    folder: ${CCACHE_DIR}
+
+  mingw_info_script:
+    - C:\msys64\usr\bin\bash.exe -lc "where gcc"
+    - C:\msys64\usr\bin\bash.exe -lc "gcc --version"
+    - C:\msys64\usr\bin\bash.exe -lc "where perl"
+    - C:\msys64\usr\bin\bash.exe -lc "perl --version"
+
+  configure_script:
+    - C:\msys64\usr\bin\bash.exe -lc " mkdir %BUILD_DIR% &&
+      cd %BUILD_DIR% &&
+      %CIRRUS_WORKING_DIR%/configure
+        --host=x86_64-w64-mingw32
+        --enable-cassert
+        --enable-tap-tests
+        --with-icu
+        --with-libxml
+        --with-libxslt
+        --with-lz4
+        --enable-debug
+        CC='ccache gcc'
+        CXX='ccache g++'"
+
+  build_script:
+    C:\msys64\usr\bin\bash.exe -lc "cd %BUILD_DIR% && make -s world-bin -j${CPUS}"
+
+  temp_install_script:
+    C:\msys64\usr\bin\bash.exe -lc "cd %BUILD_DIR% && make -s -j${CPUS} temp-install"
+
+  upload_caches: ccache
+
+  tests_script:
+    C:\msys64\usr\bin\bash.exe -lc "cd %BUILD_DIR% && make -s ${CHECK} ${CHECKFLAGS} -j${CPUS} NO_TEMP_INSTALL=1 TMPDIR=%BUILD_DIR%/tmp_install"
+
+  on_failure: *on_failure
 
 task:
   name: CompilerWarnings
-- 
2.33.0.windows.2



^ permalink  raw  reply  [nested|flat] 230+ messages in thread

* Re: Mingw task for Cirrus CI
  2022-02-25 16:44 Mingw task for Cirrus CI Melih Mutlu <[email protected]>
@ 2022-03-22 00:15 ` Andres Freund <[email protected]>
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 230+ messages in thread

From: Andres Freund @ 2022-03-22 00:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Melih Mutlu <[email protected]>; +Cc: pgsql-hackers

Hi,

On 2022-02-25 19:44:27 +0300, Melih Mutlu wrote:
> I've been working on adding Windows+MinGW environment into cirrus-ci tasks
> (discussion about ci is here [1]).

This doesn't apply anymore: http://cfbot.cputube.org/patch_37_3575.log

Could you rebase?

Greetings,

Andres Freund






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2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
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2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
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2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v36 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v35 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v33 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v57 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v31 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v29 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v57 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v44 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v39 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v32 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v33 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v25 7/8] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v51 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v46 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v30 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v56 4/6] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v47 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v50 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v48 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v49 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v34 6/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v45 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2020-03-19 06:11 [PATCH v52 5/7] Doc part of shared-memory based stats collector. Kyotaro Horiguchi <[email protected]>
2022-02-25 16:44 Mingw task for Cirrus CI Melih Mutlu <[email protected]>
2022-03-22 00:15 ` Re: Mingw task for Cirrus CI Andres Freund <[email protected]>

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