F.33. pg_buffercache

The pg_buffercache module provides a means for examining what's happening in the shared buffer cache in real time.

The module provides a C function pg_buffercache_pages that returns a set of records, plus a view pg_buffercache that wraps the function for convenient use.

By default, use is restricted to superusers and members of the pg_monitor role. Access may be granted to others using GRANT.

F.33.1. The pg_buffercache View

The definitions of the columns exposed by the view are shown in Table F.20.

Table F.20. pg_buffercache Columns

Column Type

Description

bufferidinteger

ID, in the range 1..shared_buffers

relfilenodeoid (references pg_class.relfilenode)

Filenode number of the relation

reltablespaceoid (references pg_tablespace.oid)

Tablespace OID of the relation

reldatabaseoid (references pg_database.oid)

Database OID of the relation

relforknumbersmallint

Fork number within the relation

relblocknumberbigint

Page number within the relation

isdirtyboolean

Is the page dirty?

usagecountsmallint

Clock-sweep access count

pinning_backendsinteger

Number of backends pinning this buffer


There is one row for each buffer in the shared cache. Unused buffers are shown with all fields null except bufferid. Shared system catalogs are shown as belonging to database zero.

Because the cache is shared by all the databases, there will normally be pages from relations not belonging to the current database. This means that there may not be matching join rows in pg_class for some rows, or that there could even be incorrect joins. If you are trying to join against pg_class, it's a good idea to restrict the join to rows having reldatabase equal to the current database's OID or zero.

Since buffer manager locks are not taken to copy the buffer state data that the view will display, accessing pg_buffercache view has less impact on normal buffer activity but it doesn't provide a consistent set of results across all buffers. However, we ensure that the information of each buffer is self-consistent.

F.33.2. Sample Output

 regression=# SELECT n.nspname, c.relname, count(*) AS buffers FROM pg_buffercache b JOIN pg_class c ON b.relfilenode = pg_relation_filenode(c.oid) AND b.reldatabase IN (0, (SELECT oid FROM pg_database WHERE datname = current_database())) JOIN pg_namespace n ON n.oid = c.relnamespace GROUP BY n.nspname, c.relname ORDER BY 3 DESC LIMIT 10; nspname | relname | buffers ------------+------------------------+--------- public | delete_test_table | 593 public | delete_test_table_pkey | 494 pg_catalog | pg_attribute | 472 public | quad_poly_tbl | 353 public | tenk2 | 349 public | tenk1 | 349 public | gin_test_idx | 306 pg_catalog | pg_largeobject | 206 public | gin_test_tbl | 188 public | spgist_text_tbl | 182 (10 rows) 

F.33.3. Authors

Mark Kirkwood

Design suggestions: Neil Conway

Debugging advice: Tom Lane

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