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Database maintenance tasks

Every command should be ran as the akkoma user from its home directory. For example if you are superuser, you would have to wrap the command in su akkoma -s $SHELL -lc "$COMMAND".

From source note about MIX_ENV

The mix command should be prefixed with the name of the environment your Akkoma server is running in, usually it's MIX_ENV=prod

Danger

These mix tasks can take a long time to complete. Many of them were written to address specific database issues that happened because of bugs in migrations or other specific scenarios. Do not run these tasks "just in case" if everything is fine your instance.

Replace embedded objects with their references

Replaces embedded objects with references to them in the objects table. Only needs to be ran once if the instance was created before Pleroma 1.0.5. The reason why this is not a migration is because it could significantly increase the database size after being ran, however after this VACUUM FULL will be able to reclaim about 20% (really depends on what is in the database, your mileage may vary) of the database size before the migration.

./bin/pleroma_ctl database remove_embedded_objects [option ...]
mix pleroma.database remove_embedded_objects [option ...]

Options

  • --vacuum - run VACUUM FULL after the embedded objects are replaced with their references

Prune old remote posts from the database

This will prune remote posts older than 90 days (configurable with config :pleroma, :instance, remote_post_retention_days) from the database. Pruned posts may be refetched in some cases.

Note

The disk space will only be reclaimed after a proper vacuum. By default, Postgresql does this for you on a regular basis, but if your instance has been running for a long time and there are many rows deleted, it may be advantageous to use VACUUM FULL (e.g. by using the --vacuum option).

Danger

You may run out of disk space during the execution of the task or vacuuming if you don't have about 1/3rds of the database size free. Vacuum causes a substantial increase in I/O traffic, and may lead to a degraded experience while it is running.

./bin/pleroma_ctl database prune_objects [option ...]
mix pleroma.database prune_objects [option ...]

Options

  • --keep-followed <mode> - If set to posts all posts and boosts of users with local follows will be kept.
    If set to full it will additionally keep any posts such users interacted with; this requires --keep-threads.
    By default this is set to none and followed users are not treated special.
  • --keep-threads - Don't prune posts when they are part of a thread where at least one post has seen local interaction (e.g. one of the posts is a local post, or is favourited by a local user, or has been repeated by a local user...). It also won’t delete posts when at least one of the posts in the thread has seen recent activity or is kept due to --keep-followed.
  • --keep-non-public - Keep non-public posts like DM's and followers-only, even if they are remote.
  • --limit - limits how many remote posts get pruned. This limit does not apply to any of the follow up jobs. If wanting to keep the database load in check it is thus advisable to run the standalone prune_orphaned_activities task with a limit afterwards instead of passing --prune-orphaned-activities to this task.
  • --prune-orphaned-activities - Also prune orphaned activities afterwards. Activities are things like Like, Create, Announce, Flag (aka reports)... They can significantly help reduce the database size.
  • --prune-pinned - Also prune pinned posts; keeping pinned posts does not suffice to protect their threads from pruning, even when using --keep-threads.
    Note, if using this option and pinned posts are pruned, they and their threads will just be refetched on the next user update. Therefore it usually doesn't bring much gain while incurring a heavy fetch load after pruning.
  • --vacuum - Run VACUUM FULL after the objects are pruned. This should not be used on a regular basis, but is useful if your instance has been running for a long time before pruning.

Prune orphaned activities from the database

This will prune activities which are no longer referenced by anything. Such activities might be the result of running prune_objects without --prune-orphaned-activities. The same notes and warnings apply as for prune_objects.

The task will print out how many rows were freed in total in its last line of output in the form Deleted 345 rows.
When running the job in limited batches this can be used to determine when all orphaned activities have been deleted.

./bin/pleroma_ctl database prune_orphaned_activities [option ...]
mix pleroma.database prune_orphaned_activities [option ...]

Options

  • --limit n - Only delete up to n activities in each query making up this job, i.e. if this job runs two queries at most 2n activities will be deleted. Running this task repeatedly in limited batches can help maintain the instance’s responsiveness while still freeing up some space.
  • --no-singles - Do not delete activites referencing single objects
  • --no-arrays - Do not delete activites referencing an array of objects

Create a conversation for all existing DMs

Can be safely re-run

./bin/pleroma_ctl database bump_all_conversations
mix pleroma.database bump_all_conversations

Remove duplicated items from following and update followers count for all users

./bin/pleroma_ctl database update_users_following_followers_counts
mix pleroma.database update_users_following_followers_counts

Fix the pre-existing "likes" collections for all objects

./bin/pleroma_ctl database fix_likes_collections
mix pleroma.database fix_likes_collections

Vacuum the database

Note

By default, Postgresql has an autovacuum daemon running. While the tasks described here can help in some cases, they shouldn't be needed on a regular basis. See the Postgresql docs on vacuuming for more information on this.

Analyze

Running an analyze vacuum job can improve performance by updating statistics used by the query planner. It is safe to cancel this.

./bin/pleroma_ctl database vacuum analyze
mix pleroma.database vacuum analyze

Full

Running a full vacuum job rebuilds your entire database by reading all data and rewriting it into smaller and more compact files with an optimized layout. This process will take a long time and use additional disk space as it builds the files side-by-side the existing database files. It can make your database faster and use less disk space, but should only be run if necessary. It is safe to cancel this.

./bin/pleroma_ctl database vacuum full
mix pleroma.database vacuum full

Add expiration to all local statuses

./bin/pleroma_ctl database ensure_expiration
mix pleroma.database ensure_expiration

Change Text Search Configuration

Change default_text_search_config for database and (if necessary) text_search_config used in index, then rebuild index (it may take time).

./bin/pleroma_ctl database set_text_search_config english
mix pleroma.database set_text_search_config english

See PostgreSQL documentation and docs/configuration/howto_search_cjk.md for more detail.

Pruning old activities

Over time, transient Delete activities and Tombstone objects can accumulate in your database, inflating its size. This is not ideal. There is a periodic task to prune these transient objects, but on the first run this may take a while on older instances to catch up to the current day.

./bin/pleroma_ctl database prune_task
mix pleroma.database prune_task