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I have a few relations between tables that are all related to one 'owner' table. So just for the sake of the example:

  • Table Owner with PK id
  • Table Parent with PK id and FK owner_id referring to Owner.id, with an index on it, and ON DELETE CASCADE.
  • Table Child with PK id and FK parent_id referring to Parent.id, with an index on it, and ON DELETE CASCADE.

The Child table is huge (~50 million rows), the Parent table has a few thousand rows, and Owner table is very small (~10 rows).

There are a few other tables related to Owner and Parent, but they are relatively small (a few thousands) and also have indexes on foreign keys, and ON CASCADE DELETE.

Sometimes when I delete an Owner row cascading through all deletes (around 12 million child rows and a 1 thousand parent rows) works really fast (a few seconds), but sometimes it takes nearly an hour.

How do I figure out what is causing this? I did explain on delete from child where parent_id in (select id from parent where owner_id = 1), where 1 is the id of one of the owner rows (I tried various ids just to make sure) and it is saying that it is using Bitmap Heap Scan -> Bitmap Index Scan and Index Scan. However I am not sure if I am mimicking what is actually done when there is an ON DELETE CASCADE trigger. How can I figure out what is causing these huge delays? Could it be that sometimes Postgres prefers to do a Sequential scan (due to the number of rows)?

Inserting the same rows only takes 8 minutes (including application logic and a few thousand transaction commits) so I can't figure out why straight deleting is taking so long.

I am using Postgres 9.1.6

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    please try to EXPLAIN ANALYZE Dec 12, 2012 at 11:37
  • tried explain analyse on delete from child where parent_id in (select_id from parent where owner_id = 1) and got the same Bitmap Heap Scan -> Bitmap Index etc. Got these costs: (cost=150.01..562757.84 rows=6560827 width=12) (actual time=39.792..39.792 rows=0 loops=1)
    – jbx
    Dec 12, 2012 at 11:58
  • there are terrible wrong statistics - so bitmap index scan is not optimal - please, try to disable bitmap_scan -- "set enable_bitmapscan to off" Dec 12, 2012 at 12:08
  • I executed set enable_bitmapscan to off and did explain analyse again and now it uses index scan only. However I tried to delete again and it is still taking ages :(
    – jbx
    Dec 12, 2012 at 13:46
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    @Matthieu Unfortunately not. Its been a few years now, but if I remember well, I dropped the indexes and rebuilt them afterwards when I needed to delete such massive amounts of children linked by a foreign key.
    – jbx
    Aug 24, 2018 at 13:06

1 Answer 1

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You say sometimes it goes from seconds to hours. There are a fairly large number of rows to be deleted. You could be dealing with all sorts of factors ranging from data caching to row locks. Unfortunately if these are transient conditions it may be hard to track them down when it is not happening.

A few things you should look at initially is whether you can find any patterns. Look at SELECT * FROM pg_locks when it happens. You should also SELECT * FROM pg_stat_activity when the problem occurs to see where locks may be being held.

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  • There are no locks, no one else is accessing the database. (In fact I sometimes just drop the database to clean out the data instead because deleting it takes so long, and it allows me). Yes there is a large amount of rows, but inserting them takes 8 minutes, so it doesn't make sense that deleting them takes hours. I recently increased the shared_buffers and effective_cache_size from defaults, and this seemed to have some effect, taking it down to around 20 minutes... better but not sure if its optimal.
    – jbx
    Apr 18, 2013 at 14:25

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