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PostgreSQL 10 Administration Cookbook

We've looked at getting the size of a specific table, so now it's time to widen the problem to related areas. Rather than having an absolute value for a specific table, let's look at the relative sizes.
The following basic query will tell us the 10 biggest tables:
SELECT table_name ,pg_relation_size(table_schema || '.' || table_name) as size FROM information_schema.tables WHERE table_schema NOT IN ('information_schema', 'pg_catalog') ORDER BY size DESC LIMIT 10;
The tables are shown in descending order of size, with at the most 10 rows displayed. In this case, we look at all the tables in all the schemas, apart from the tables in information_schema
or pg_catalog
, like we did in the How many tables are in the database? recipe.
PostgreSQL provides a dedicated function, pg_relation_size
, to compute the actual disk space used by a specific table or index. We just need to provide the table name. In addition to the main data files, there are...