Better advice for vacuuming after restoring.

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lain 2020-02-22 13:14:30 +00:00
parent 114e7b764e
commit c05cbc47f9

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@ -18,9 +18,8 @@
6. Run `sudo -Hu postgres pg_restore -d <pleroma_db> -v -1 </path/to/backup_location/pleroma.pgdump>` 6. Run `sudo -Hu postgres pg_restore -d <pleroma_db> -v -1 </path/to/backup_location/pleroma.pgdump>`
7. If you installed a newer Pleroma version, you should run `mix ecto.migrate`[^1]. This task performs database migrations, if there were any. 7. If you installed a newer Pleroma version, you should run `mix ecto.migrate`[^1]. This task performs database migrations, if there were any.
8. Restart the Pleroma service. 8. Restart the Pleroma service.
9. After you've restarted Pleroma, you will notice that postgres will take up more cpu resources than usual. A lot in fact. To fix this you must do a VACUUM ANLAYZE. This can also be done while the instance is still running like so: 9. Run `sudo -Hu postgres vacuumdb --all --analyze-in-stages`. This will quickly generate the statistics so that postgres can properly plan queries.
$ sudo -u postgres psql pleroma_database_name
pleroma=# VACUUM ANALYZE;
[^1]: Prefix with `MIX_ENV=prod` to run it using the production config file. [^1]: Prefix with `MIX_ENV=prod` to run it using the production config file.
## Remove ## Remove