Configuration parameter

bgwriter_lru_multiplier — PostgreSQL configuration parameter

Category Resource Consumption Default 2 Change scope Sighup

The number of dirty buffers written in each round is based on the number of new buffers that have been needed by server processes during recent rounds.

At a glance

Property Value
Parameter bgwriter_lru_multiplier
Category Resource Consumption
Default 2.0
Value type floating point
Change scope Reload (postgresql.conf, SIGHUP)
Available in PostgreSQL 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 (added in 12)

What it does

The number of dirty buffers written in each round is based on the number of new buffers that have been needed by server processes during recent rounds. The average recent need is multiplied by bgwriter_lru_multiplier to arrive at an estimate of the number of buffers that will be needed during the next round. Dirty buffers are written until there are that many clean, reusable buffers available. (However, no more than bgwriter_lru_maxpages buffers will be written per round.) Thus, a setting of 1.0 represents a “just in time” policy of writing exactly the number of buffers predicted to be needed. Larger values provide some cushion against spikes in demand, while smaller values intentionally leave writes to be done by server processes. The default is 2.0. This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf file or on the server command line.

(Description quoted from the official PostgreSQL documentation.)

How to apply a change

Set it in postgresql.conf (or with ALTER SYSTEM) and reload with SELECT pg_reload_conf(); or pg_ctl reload — no restart needed.

Inspect the current value and source with SHOW bgwriter_lru_multiplier; or SELECT name, setting, unit, context, source FROM pg_settings WHERE name = 'bgwriter_lru_multiplier';.

Tuning guidance

This parameter is rarely a performance lever. Leave it at the default unless you have a specific, documented reason to change it, change it on one session or one role/database first, and confirm the effect with pg_settings and your own measurements before rolling it out cluster-wide.

Reference

PostgreSQL documentation — bgwriter_lru_multiplier.

Keep going

Related & next steps

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