PostgreSQL "size of temporary files"
I found nothing in the pgAdmin documentation, but the source code reveals the query behind these entries (added for Postgres 9.2+):
It boils down to:
SELECT temp_files AS "Temporary files"
, temp_bytes AS "Size of temporary files"
FROM pg_stat_database db;
And the Postgres manual has details for pg_stat_database
:
tmp_files
bigint
Number of temporary files created by queries in this database. All temporary files are counted, regardless of why the temporary file was created (e.g., sorting or hashing), and regardless of the log_temp_files setting.
temp_bytes
bigint
Total amount of data written to temporary files by queries in this database. All temporary files are counted, regardless of why the temporary file was created, and regardless of the log_temp_files setting.
Note that these values do not contribute to the size of your database. But they indicate that your setting for work_mem
may be too low, so that many sort operations spill to disk (which is very slow as compared to just RAM).
Related:
- Optimize simple query using ORDER BY date and text
To actually compact the size of your database:
- VACUUM returning disk space to operating system
To measure size:
- Measure the size of a PostgreSQL table row
Aside: WAL (Write Ahead Log) would be equivalent in Postgres for the transaction log in SQL Server. Nice explanation in this related answer on SO:
- Why do SQL databases use a write-ahead log over a command log?
According to:
http://www.postgresql.org/message-id/[email protected]
The temp counter (files and space used) shows a total of all temp files used since probably cluster creation. It does not reflect the current space used by temp files.
My system for example shows almost 700GB of temp files used, but the actual space taken up by temp files in /var/lib/pgsql/9.3/data/base/pgsql_tmp is only 53MB currently.