6

The postgres documentation says:

"The age column measures the number of transactions from the cutoff XID to the current transaction's XID."

1 Answer 1

10

XIDs are just sequential numbers, so calculating the "age" of an XID is simple subtraction, i.e.:

age(datfrozenxid) = txid_current() - datfrozenxid

XIDs for data created during initdb, as well as for data frozen prior to Postgres 9.4, will always report an age of 2147483647.

The full source code of the age() function (all five lines of it) can be found here.

4
  • Thanks Nick, what is datfrozenxid ? Feb 20, 2019 at 18:57
  • 2
    It's explained in the docs you mentioned: it is just the minimum of the per-table relfrozenxid values within the database Feb 20, 2019 at 22:15
  • From your answer and checking the source code, in case of a txid wraparound, we can have, for instance, txid_current() = 1000 and datfrozenxid = 4.294.967.000 (a value very near the wraparound). I believe Age would have a weird behavior, returning the negative number -4.294.966.000‬, because it does't handle wraparounds. I did not confirm this in a real test yet due to be a little difficult to prepare a real wraparound test, but from source, it is expected. This has prevented us from using age for certain use cases so far. Any thoughts? Oct 9, 2019 at 21:53
  • 1
    @Thiago: Sure looks that way to me... It'll take ~12 hours to test, but I'll try and get around to it some time. Oct 10, 2019 at 4:44

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.