It is possible to do, in a roundabout way.
Say your stored procedure is called uses_too_many_cycles()
. Let's write a psql
wrapper script for it:
\set QUIET on
\set ECHO errors
SELECT pg_backend_pid() AS my_pg_backend_pid
\gset
\pset tuples_only on
\pset format unaligned
\! rm -f /tmp/renice_my_pg_backend
\out /tmp/renice_my_pg_backend
SELECT '#!/bin/bash' ;
SELECT 'renice +19 --pid ' || :my_pg_backend_pid ;
\out
\! chmod +x /tmp/renice_my_pg_backend
\! /tmp/renice_my_pg_backend
CALL uses_too_many_cycles();
We write a tiny shell script containing our desired command, and then we execute that shell script; we could not just execute our desired command directly, because psql
treats everything to right of \!
as a literal string.
General Caveats
- Playing with OS scheduler priorities can trigger unusual, and unpleasant, edge cases in behavior of server applications. There is an element of risk.
- This trick attacks the symptom, not the cause; it should not be the first thing to reach for.
- "Technically possible" does not mean "advisable".
Specific Technical Caveats
- The lowered OS scheduler priority will persist for lifetime of the affected PostgreSQL backed process, unless you reset it.
- If parallel query is enabled, the lowered scheduler priority will not be inherited by any helper backend processes PostgreSQL spins up.
- Depending on your Linux distribution,
renice(1)
syntax may differ.
- This trick will only work if one of the following conditions holds:
- executing OS user is the PostgreSQL user
- executing OS user is
root
- executing OS user is privileged through some mechanism (
sudoers
, PAM, ...) to renice(1)
other users' processes, or anyway the PostgreSQL user's processes
- wrapped in a
setuid
-privileged script
Each of those conditions is operationally inadvisable, does not scale well, or both.