19

I want to log each query execution time which is run in a day.

For example like this,

2012-10-01 13:23:38 STATEMENT: SELECT * FROM pg_stat_database  runtime:265 ms.

Please give me some guideline.

3 Answers 3

37

If you set

log_min_duration_statement = 0
log_statement = all 

in your postgresql.conf, then you will see all statements being logged into the Postgres logfile.

If you enable

log_duration

that will also print the time taken for each statement. This is off by default.

Using the log_statement parameter you can control which type of statement you want to log (DDL, DML, ...)

This will produce an output like this in the logfile:

2012-10-01 13:00:43 CEST postgres LOG:  statement: select count(*) from pg_class;
2012-10-01 13:00:43 CEST postgres LOG:  duration: 47.000 ms

More details in the manual:

If you want a daily list, you probably want to configure the logfile to rotate on a daily basis. Again this is described in the manual.

4
  • thank! for guide Mr.a_horse_with_no_name , but only query is log when i changed in postgresql.conf, What i really want is query and related execution time.
    – 9ine
    Oct 1, 2012 at 10:50
  • @9ine: what do you mean with "only query is log"? That's what you asked for: to log queries.
    – user330315
    Oct 1, 2012 at 10:52
  • I mean query and related execution time.
    – 9ine
    Oct 1, 2012 at 10:55
  • @9ine: query and execution time are logged. Again: what's your question?
    – user330315
    Oct 1, 2012 at 11:00
7

I believe OP was actually asking for execution duration, not the timestamp.

To include the duration in the log output, open pgsql/<version>/data/postgresql.conf, find the line that reads

#log_duration = off

and change it to

log_duration = on

If you can't find the given parameter, just add it in a new line in the file.

After saving the changes, restart the postgresql service, or just invoke

pg_ctl reload -D <path to the directory of postgresql.conf>

e.g.

pg_ctl reload -D /var/lib/pgsql/9.2/data/

to reload the configuration.

3

I think a better option is to enable pg_stat_statements by enabling the PG stats extension. This will help you to find the query execution time for each query nicely recorded in a view

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