PgSleep wait event (Timeout) — PostgreSQL

PostgreSQL Timeout wait event PgSleep: Waiting due to a call to pg_sleep or a sibling function.

Summary

PgSleep is a PostgreSQL Timeout wait event. The official server documentation describes it as: “Waiting due to a call to pg_sleep or a sibling function.” (verbatim from PostgreSQL’s wait_event_names.txt catalog).

Classification

  • wait_event: PgSleep
  • wait_event_type: Timeout
  • Internal enum: WAIT_EVENT_PG_SLEEP
  • Reported in: pg_stat_activity

What the Timeout class indicates

(Paraphrased explanation.) The process is deliberately sleeping for a timeout to elapse. These waits are expected and driven by configuration.

How to observe it

(Illustrative query — not from the catalog.) You can see which sessions are currently reporting this wait event in the cumulative statistics view:

SELECT pid, state, wait_event_type, wait_event, query
FROM pg_stat_activity
WHERE wait_event_type = 'Timeout'
  AND wait_event = 'PgSleep';

Version applicability

Confirmed present in PostgreSQL major version(s): 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 (verified against each release’s server source).

This is a long-standing wait event: it is present at least as far back as PostgreSQL 12 (the oldest release checked here) and very likely predates it.

The machine-readable wait_event_names.txt catalog exists from PostgreSQL 17 onward; presence in PostgreSQL 12–16 was verified directly from the wait-event, lock, and lightweight-lock definitions in those releases’ source code.

References

  • PostgreSQL documentation — Wait Events
  • PostgreSQL source — src/backend/utils/activity/wait_event_names.txt