These parameters control server-wide statistics collection features.
When statistics collection is enabled, the data that is produced can be
accessed via the pg_stat
and
pg_statio
family of system views.
Refer to Chapter 28 for more information.
track_activities
(boolean
)
Enables the collection of information on the currently executing command of each session, along with its identifier and the time when that command began execution. This parameter is on by default. Note that even when enabled, this information is not visible to all users, only to superusers and the user owning the session being reported on, so it should not represent a security risk. Only superusers can change this setting.
track_activity_query_size
(integer
)
Specifies the amount of memory reserved to store the text of the
currently executing command for each active session, for the
pg_stat_activity
.query
field.
If this value is specified without units, it is taken as bytes.
The default value is 1024 bytes.
This parameter can only be set at server start.
track_counts
(boolean
)
Enables collection of statistics on database activity. This parameter is on by default, because the autovacuum daemon needs the collected information. Only superusers can change this setting.
track_io_timing
(boolean
)
Enables timing of database I/O calls. This parameter is off by
default, as it will repeatedly query the operating system for
the current time, which may cause significant overhead on some
platforms. You can use the pg_test_timing tool to
measure the overhead of timing on your system.
I/O timing information is
displayed in
pg_stat_database
, in the output of
EXPLAIN when the BUFFERS
option
is used, by autovacuum for auto-vacuums and auto-analyzes, when
log_autovacuum_min_duration is set and by
pg_stat_statements. Only superusers can change this
setting.
track_wal_io_timing
(boolean
)
Enables timing of WAL I/O calls. This parameter is off by default,
as it will repeatedly query the operating system for the current time,
which may cause significant overhead on some platforms.
You can use the pg_test_timing tool to
measure the overhead of timing on your system.
I/O timing information is
displayed in
pg_stat_wal
. Only superusers can
change this setting.
track_functions
(enum
)
Enables tracking of function call counts and time used. Specify
pl
to track only procedural-language functions,
all
to also track SQL and C language functions.
The default is none
, which disables function
statistics tracking. Only superusers can change this setting.
SQL-language functions that are simple enough to be “inlined” into the calling query will not be tracked, regardless of this setting.
stats_temp_directory
(string
)
Sets the directory to store temporary statistics data in. This can be
a path relative to the data directory or an absolute path. The default
is pg_stat_tmp
. Pointing this at a RAM-based
file system will decrease physical I/O requirements and can lead to
improved performance.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
compute_query_id
(enum
)
Enables in-core computation of a query identifier.
Query identifiers can be displayed in the pg_stat_activity
view, using EXPLAIN
, or emitted in the log if
configured via the log_line_prefix parameter.
The pg_stat_statements extension also requires a query
identifier to be computed. Note that an external module can
alternatively be used if the in-core query identifier computation
method is not acceptable. In this case, in-core computation
must be always disabled.
Valid values are off
(always disabled),
on
(always enabled) and auto
,
which lets modules such as pg_stat_statements
automatically enable it.
The default is auto
.
To ensure that only one query identifier is calculated and displayed, extensions that calculate query identifiers should throw an error if a query identifier has already been computed.
log_statement_stats
(boolean
)
log_parser_stats
(boolean
)
log_planner_stats
(boolean
)
log_executor_stats
(boolean
)
For each query, output performance statistics of the respective
module to the server log. This is a crude profiling
instrument, similar to the Unix getrusage()
operating
system facility. log_statement_stats
reports total
statement statistics, while the others report per-module statistics.
log_statement_stats
cannot be enabled together with
any of the per-module options. All of these options are disabled by
default. Only superusers can change these settings.