9.24. System Administration Functions

Table 9-55 shows the functions available to query and alter run-time configuration parameters.

Table 9-55. Configuration Settings Functions

NameReturn TypeDescription
current_setting(setting_name) textget current value of setting
set_config(setting_name, new_value, is_local) textset parameter and return new value

The function current_setting yields the current value of the setting setting_name. It corresponds to the SQL command SHOW. An example:

SELECT current_setting('datestyle');

 current_setting
-----------------
 ISO, MDY
(1 row)

set_config sets the parameter setting_name to new_value. If is_local is true, the new value will only apply to the current transaction. If you want the new value to apply for the current session, use false instead. The function corresponds to the SQL command SET. An example:

SELECT set_config('log_statement_stats', 'off', false);

 set_config
------------
 off
(1 row)

The functions shown in Table 9-56 send control signals to other server processes. Use of these functions is restricted to superusers.

Table 9-56. Server Signalling Functions

NameReturn TypeDescription
pg_cancel_backend(pid int) booleanCancel a backend's current query
pg_reload_conf() booleanCause server processes to reload their configuration files
pg_rotate_logfile() booleanRotate server's log file
pg_terminate_backend(pid int) booleanTerminate a backend

Each of these functions returns true if successful and false otherwise.

pg_cancel_backend and pg_terminate_backend send signals (SIGINT or SIGTERM respectively) to backend processes identified by process ID. The process ID of an active backend can be found from the procpid column of the pg_stat_activity view, or by listing the postgres processes on the server (using ps on Unix or the Task Manager on Windows).

pg_reload_conf sends a SIGHUP signal to the server, causing configuration files to be reloaded by all server processes.

pg_rotate_logfile signals the log-file manager to switch to a new output file immediately. This works only when the built-in log collector is running, since otherwise there is no log-file manager subprocess.

The functions shown in Table 9-57 assist in making on-line backups. These functions cannot be executed during recovery.

Table 9-57. Backup Control Functions

NameReturn TypeDescription
pg_create_restore_point(name text) textCreate a named point for performing restore (restricted to superusers)
pg_current_xlog_insert_location() textGet current transaction log insert location
pg_current_xlog_location() textGet current transaction log write location
pg_start_backup(label text [, fast boolean ]) textPrepare for performing on-line backup (restricted to superusers or replication roles)
pg_stop_backup() textFinish performing on-line backup (restricted to superusers or replication roles)
pg_switch_xlog() textForce switch to a new transaction log file (restricted to superusers)
pg_xlogfile_name(location text) textConvert transaction log location string to file name
pg_xlogfile_name_offset(location text) text, integerConvert transaction log location string to file name and decimal byte offset within file

pg_start_backup accepts an arbitrary user-defined label for the backup. (Typically this would be the name under which the backup dump file will be stored.) The function writes a backup label file (backup_label) into the database cluster's data directory, performs a checkpoint, and then returns the backup's starting transaction log location as text. The user can ignore this result value, but it is provided in case it is useful.

postgres=# select pg_start_backup('label_goes_here');
 pg_start_backup
-----------------
 0/D4445B8
(1 row)

There is an optional second parameter of type boolean. If true, it specifies executing pg_start_backup as quickly as possible. This forces an immediate checkpoint which will cause a spike in I/O operations, slowing any concurrently executing queries.

pg_stop_backup removes the label file created by pg_start_backup, and creates a backup history file in the transaction log archive area. The history file includes the label given to pg_start_backup, the starting and ending transaction log locations for the backup, and the starting and ending times of the backup. The return value is the backup's ending transaction log location (which again can be ignored). After recording the ending location, the current transaction log insertion point is automatically advanced to the next transaction log file, so that the ending transaction log file can be archived immediately to complete the backup.

pg_switch_xlog moves to the next transaction log file, allowing the current file to be archived (assuming you are using continuous archiving). The return value is the ending transaction log location + 1 within the just-completed transaction log file. If there has been no transaction log activity since the last transaction log switch, pg_switch_xlog does nothing and returns the start location of the transaction log file currently in use.

pg_create_restore_point creates a named transaction log record that can be used as recovery target, and returns the corresponding transaction log location. The given name can then be used with recovery_target_name to specify the point up to which recovery will proceed. Avoid creating multiple restore points with the same name, since recovery will stop at the first one whose name matches the recovery target.

pg_current_xlog_location displays the current transaction log write location in the same format used by the above functions. Similarly, pg_current_xlog_insert_location displays the current transaction log insertion point. The insertion point is the "logical" end of the transaction log at any instant, while the write location is the end of what has actually been written out from the server's internal buffers. The write location is the end of what can be examined from outside the server, and is usually what you want if you are interested in archiving partially-complete transaction log files. The insertion point is made available primarily for server debugging purposes. These are both read-only operations and do not require superuser permissions.

You can use pg_xlogfile_name_offset to extract the corresponding transaction log file name and byte offset from the results of any of the above functions. For example:

postgres=# SELECT * FROM pg_xlogfile_name_offset(pg_stop_backup());
        file_name         | file_offset 
--------------------------+-------------
 00000001000000000000000D |     4039624
(1 row)

Similarly, pg_xlogfile_name extracts just the transaction log file name. When the given transaction log location is exactly at a transaction log file boundary, both these functions return the name of the preceding transaction log file. This is usually the desired behavior for managing transaction log archiving behavior, since the preceding file is the last one that currently needs to be archived.

For details about proper usage of these functions, see Section 24.3.

The functions shown in Table 9-58 provide information about the current status of the standby. These functions may be executed during both recovery and in normal running.

Table 9-58. Recovery Information Functions

NameReturn TypeDescription
pg_is_in_recovery() boolTrue if recovery is still in progress.
pg_last_xlog_receive_location() textGet last transaction log location received and synced to disk by streaming replication. While streaming replication is in progress this will increase monotonically. If recovery has completed this will remain static at the value of the last WAL record received and synced to disk during recovery. If streaming replication is disabled, or if it has not yet started, the function returns NULL.
pg_last_xlog_replay_location() textGet last transaction log location replayed during recovery. If recovery is still in progress this will increase monotonically. If recovery has completed then this value will remain static at the value of the last WAL record applied during that recovery. When the server has been started normally without recovery the function returns NULL.
pg_last_xact_replay_timestamp() timestamp with time zoneGet time stamp of last transaction replayed during recovery. This is the time at which the commit or abort WAL record for that transaction was generated on the primary. If no transactions have been replayed during recovery, this function returns NULL. Otherwise, if recovery is still in progress this will increase monotonically. If recovery has completed then this value will remain static at the value of the last transaction applied during that recovery. When the server has been started normally without recovery the function returns NULL.

The functions shown in Table 9-59 control the progress of recovery. These functions may be executed only during recovery.

Table 9-59. Recovery Control Functions

NameReturn TypeDescription
pg_is_xlog_replay_paused() boolTrue if recovery is paused.
pg_xlog_replay_pause() voidPauses recovery immediately.
pg_xlog_replay_resume() voidRestarts recovery if it was paused.

While recovery is paused no further database changes are applied. If in hot standby, all new queries will see the same consistent snapshot of the database, and no further query conflicts will be generated until recovery is resumed.

If streaming replication is disabled, the paused state may continue indefinitely without problem. While streaming replication is in progress WAL records will continue to be received, which will eventually fill available disk space, depending upon the duration of the pause, the rate of WAL generation and available disk space.

The functions shown in Table 9-60 calculate the disk space usage of database objects.

Table 9-60. Database Object Size Functions

NameReturn TypeDescription
pg_column_size(any)intNumber of bytes used to store a particular value (possibly compressed)
pg_database_size(oid) bigintDisk space used by the database with the specified OID
pg_database_size(name) bigintDisk space used by the database with the specified name
pg_indexes_size(regclass) bigint Total disk space used by indexes attached to the specified table
pg_relation_size(relation regclass, fork text) bigint Disk space used by the specified fork ('main', 'fsm', 'vm', or 'init') of the specified table or index
pg_relation_size(relation regclass) bigint Shorthand for pg_relation_size(..., 'main')
pg_size_pretty(bigint) textConverts a size in bytes into a human-readable format with size units
pg_table_size(regclass) bigint Disk space used by the specified table, excluding indexes (but including TOAST, free space map, and visibility map)
pg_tablespace_size(oid) bigintDisk space used by the tablespace with the specified OID
pg_tablespace_size(name) bigintDisk space used by the tablespace with the specified name
pg_total_relation_size(regclass) bigint Total disk space used by the specified table, including all indexes and TOAST data

pg_column_size shows the space used to store any individual data value.

pg_total_relation_size accepts the OID or name of a table or toast table, and returns the total on-disk space used for that table, including all associated indexes. This function is equivalent to pg_table_size + pg_indexes_size.

pg_table_size accepts the OID or name of a table and returns the disk space needed for that table, exclusive of indexes. (TOAST space, free space map, and visibility map are included.)

pg_indexes_size accepts the OID or name of a table and returns the total disk space used by all the indexes attached to that table.

pg_database_size and pg_tablespace_size accept the OID or name of a database or tablespace, and return the total disk space used therein. To use pg_database_size, you must have CONNECT permission on the specified database (which is granted by default). To use pg_tablespace_size, you must have CREATE permission on the specified tablespace, unless it is the default tablespace for the current database.

pg_relation_size accepts the OID or name of a table, index or toast table, and returns the on-disk size in bytes of one fork of that relation. (Note that for most purposes it is more convenient to use the higher-level functions pg_total_relation_size or pg_table_size, which sum the sizes of all forks.) With one argument, it returns the size of the main data fork of the relation. The second argument can be provided to specify which fork to examine:

pg_size_pretty can be used to format the result of one of the other functions in a human-readable way, using kB, MB, GB or TB as appropriate.

The functions above that operate on tables or indexes accept a regclass argument, which is simply the OID of the table or index in the pg_class system catalog. You do not have to look up the OID by hand, however, since the regclass data type's input converter will do the work for you. Just write the table name enclosed in single quotes so that it looks like a literal constant. For compatibility with the handling of ordinary SQL names, the string will be converted to lower case unless it contains double quotes around the table name.

The functions shown in Table 9-61 assist in identifying the specific disk files associated with database objects.

Table 9-61. Database Object Location Functions

NameReturn TypeDescription
pg_relation_filenode(relation regclass) oid Filenode number of the specified relation
pg_relation_filepath(relation regclass) text File path name of the specified relation

pg_relation_filenode accepts the OID or name of a table, index, sequence, or toast table, and returns the "filenode" number currently assigned to it. The filenode is the base component of the file name(s) used for the relation (see Section 55.1 for more information). For most tables the result is the same as pg_class.relfilenode, but for certain system catalogs relfilenode is zero and this function must be used to get the correct value. The function returns NULL if passed a relation that does not have storage, such as a view.

pg_relation_filepath is similar to pg_relation_filenode, but it returns the entire file path name (relative to the database cluster's data directory PGDATA) of the relation.

The functions shown in Table 9-62 provide native access to files on the machine hosting the server. Only files within the database cluster directory and the log_directory can be accessed. Use a relative path for files in the cluster directory, and a path matching the log_directory configuration setting for log files. Use of these functions is restricted to superusers.

Table 9-62. Generic File Access Functions

NameReturn TypeDescription
pg_ls_dir(dirname text) setof textList the contents of a directory
pg_read_file(filename text [, offset bigint, length bigint]) textReturn the contents of a text file
pg_read_binary_file(filename text [, offset bigint, length bigint]) byteaReturn the contents of a file
pg_stat_file(filename text) recordReturn information about a file

pg_ls_dir returns all the names in the specified directory, except the special entries "." and "..".

pg_read_file returns part of a text file, starting at the given offset, returning at most length bytes (less if the end of file is reached first). If offset is negative, it is relative to the end of the file. If offset and length are omitted, the entire file is returned. The bytes read from the file are interpreted as a string in the server encoding; an error is thrown if they are not valid in that encoding.

pg_read_binary_file is similar to pg_read_file, except that the result is a bytea value; accordingly, no encoding checks are performed. In combination with the convert_from function, this function can be used to read a file in a specified encoding:

SELECT convert_from(pg_read_binary_file('file_in_utf8.txt'), 'UTF8');

pg_stat_file returns a record containing the file size, last accessed time stamp, last modified time stamp, last file status change time stamp (Unix platforms only), file creation time stamp (Windows only), and a boolean indicating if it is a directory. Typical usages include:

SELECT * FROM pg_stat_file('filename');
SELECT (pg_stat_file('filename')).modification;

The functions shown in Table 9-63 manage advisory locks. For details about proper use of these functions, see Section 13.3.4.

Table 9-63. Advisory Lock Functions

NameReturn TypeDescription
pg_advisory_lock(key bigint) voidObtain exclusive session level advisory lock
pg_advisory_lock(key1 int, key2 int) voidObtain exclusive session level advisory lock
pg_advisory_lock_shared(key bigint) voidObtain shared session level advisory lock
pg_advisory_lock_shared(key1 int, key2 int) voidObtain shared session level advisory lock
pg_advisory_unlock(key bigint) booleanRelease an exclusive session level advisory lock
pg_advisory_unlock(key1 int, key2 int) booleanRelease an exclusive session level advisory lock
pg_advisory_unlock_all() voidRelease all session level advisory locks held by the current session
pg_advisory_unlock_shared(key bigint) booleanRelease a shared session level advisory lock
pg_advisory_unlock_shared(key1 int, key2 int) booleanRelease a shared session level advisory lock
pg_advisory_xact_lock(key bigint) voidObtain exclusive transaction level advisory lock
pg_advisory_xact_lock(key1 int, key2 int) voidObtain exclusive transaction level advisory lock
pg_advisory_xact_lock_shared(key bigint) voidObtain shared transaction level advisory lock
pg_advisory_xact_lock_shared(key1 int, key2 int) voidObtain shared transaction level advisory lock
pg_try_advisory_lock(key bigint) booleanObtain exclusive session level advisory lock if available
pg_try_advisory_lock(key1 int, key2 int) booleanObtain exclusive session level advisory lock if available
pg_try_advisory_lock_shared(key bigint) booleanObtain shared session level advisory lock if available
pg_try_advisory_lock_shared(key1 int, key2 int) booleanObtain shared session level advisory lock if available
pg_try_advisory_xact_lock(key bigint) booleanObtain exclusive transaction level advisory lock if available
pg_try_advisory_xact_lock(key1 int, key2 int) booleanObtain exclusive transaction level advisory lock if available
pg_try_advisory_xact_lock_shared(key bigint) booleanObtain shared transaction level advisory lock if available
pg_try_advisory_xact_lock_shared(key1 int, key2 int) booleanObtain shared transaction level advisory lock if available

pg_advisory_lock locks an application-defined resource, which can be identified either by a single 64-bit key value or two 32-bit key values (note that these two key spaces do not overlap). If another session already holds a lock on the same resource identifier, this function will wait until the resource becomes available. The lock is exclusive. Multiple lock requests stack, so that if the same resource is locked three times it must then be unlocked three times to be released for other sessions' use.

pg_advisory_lock_shared works the same as pg_advisory_lock, except the lock can be shared with other sessions requesting shared locks. Only would-be exclusive lockers are locked out.

pg_try_advisory_lock is similar to pg_advisory_lock, except the function will not wait for the lock to become available. It will either obtain the lock immediately and return true, or return false if the lock cannot be acquired immediately.

pg_try_advisory_lock_shared works the same as pg_try_advisory_lock, except it attempts to acquire a shared rather than an exclusive lock.

pg_advisory_unlock will release a previously-acquired exclusive session level advisory lock. It returns true if the lock is successfully released. If the lock was not held, it will return false, and in addition, an SQL warning will be reported by the server.

pg_advisory_unlock_shared works the same as pg_advisory_unlock, except it releases a shared session level advisory lock.

pg_advisory_unlock_all will release all session level advisory locks held by the current session. (This function is implicitly invoked at session end, even if the client disconnects ungracefully.)

pg_advisory_xact_lock works the same as pg_advisory_lock, except the lock is automatically released at the end of the current transaction and cannot be released explicitly.

pg_advisory_xact_lock_shared works the same as pg_advisory_lock_shared, except the lock is automatically released at the end of the current transaction and cannot be released explicitly.

pg_try_advisory_xact_lock works the same as pg_try_advisory_lock, except the lock, if acquired, is automatically released at the end of the current transaction and cannot be released explicitly.

pg_try_advisory_xact_lock_shared works the same as pg_try_advisory_lock_shared, except the lock, if acquired, is automatically released at the end of the current transaction and cannot be released explicitly.