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| I've run PHP and PostgreSQL for quite a while and never seen this problem before. I think it's new, but maybe I never paid attention to it before. I am frequently running out of connections to the database. Here's a snippet of my ps -ax 1882 ?? S 0:00.07 postgres: postgres cgssd_members [local] idle 1883 ?? S 0:00.09 postgres: postgres cgssd_members [local] idle 1884 ?? S 0:00.07 postgres: postgres cgssd_members [local] idle 1886 ?? S 0:00.14 postgres: postgres cgssd_members [local] idle 1887 ?? S 0:00.06 postgres: postgres cgssd_members [local] idle 500 std- S 0:01.14 /usr/local/bin/postmaster -D /usr/local/pgsql/data 501 std- S 0:00.02 postgres: stats buffer process 502 std- S 0:00.21 postgres: stats collector process As you can see, there are some connections that have come in from PHP on my web pages and have gone idle. I've never seen these before and eventually they build up and I get an error connecting from the PHP page to the database. I can kill -9 one of them, and the other disappear. What is going on here? Some cleanup process is not working. I'm running Apache 1.3.33 on Darwin Kernal 7.9.0 (MacOS X 10.3.9) with PHP 4.3.6 and PostgreSQL 7.4.2. Ideas and suggestions are welcome. Thanks, Gary ************************************************** ************************ * Gary B. Hoffman, Computing Services Manager e-mail: ghoffman@ucsd.edu * * Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies (IR/PS) * * University of California, San Diego (UCSD) voice: (858) 534-1989 * * 9500 Gilman Dr. MC 0519 fax: (858) 534-3939 * * La Jolla, CA 92093-0519 USA web: http://irps.ucsd.edu/ * ************************************************** ************************ ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster |
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| On Sun, 2005-11-20 at 22:05 -0800, Gary Hoffman wrote: > I've run PHP and PostgreSQL for quite a while and never seen this problem > before. I think it's new, but maybe I never paid attention to it before. > > I am frequently running out of connections to the database. Here's a > snippet of my ps -ax > > 1882 ?? S 0:00.07 postgres: postgres cgssd_members [local] idle > > 1883 ?? S 0:00.09 postgres: postgres cgssd_members [local] idle > > 1884 ?? S 0:00.07 postgres: postgres cgssd_members [local] idle > > 1886 ?? S 0:00.14 postgres: postgres cgssd_members [local] idle > > 1887 ?? S 0:00.06 postgres: postgres cgssd_members [local] idle > > 500 std- S 0:01.14 /usr/local/bin/postmaster -D > /usr/local/pgsql/data > 501 std- S 0:00.02 postgres: stats buffer process > > 502 std- S 0:00.21 postgres: stats collector process > > > As you can see, there are some connections that have come in from PHP on > my web pages and have gone idle. I've never seen these before and > eventually they build up and I get an error connecting from the PHP page > to the database. I can kill -9 one of them, and the other disappear. What > is going on here? Some cleanup process is not working. > > I'm running Apache 1.3.33 on Darwin Kernal 7.9.0 (MacOS X 10.3.9) with PHP > 4.3.6 and PostgreSQL 7.4.2. > > Ideas and suggestions are welcome. Are you absolutley sure you close postgres connection within your PHP pages? I've experienced very same problem using PHP (i was not using persistent database connections - those seemed much slower) because I was missing several 'pg_close()' instructions. The same thing happened to my developers here, using java/tomcat/jdbc to connect to postgres. Make sure you close all your postgres connections. Mike -- Mario Splivalo Mob-Art mario.splivalo@mobart.hr "I can do it quick, I can do it cheap, I can do it well. Pick any two." ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to majordomo@postgresql.org so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly |
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