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
set enable_bitmapscan to off
and didexplain analyse
again and now it usesindex scan
only. However I tried to delete again and it is still taking ages :(