- [Vacuuming PostgreSQL](#vacuuming-postgresql), for when you wish to run a Postgres [VACUUM](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-vacuum.html) (optimizing disk space)
You can use the `/usr/local/bin/matrix-postgres-cli` tool to get interactive terminal access ([psql](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/11/app-psql.html)) to the PostgreSQL server.
If you are using an [external Postgres server](configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md), the above tool will not be available.
**Note**: this will automatically stop Synapse temporarily and restart it later. You'll also need plenty of available disk space in your Postgres data directory (usually `/matrix/postgres/data`).
If you are using an [external Postgres server](configuring-playbook-external-postgres.md), the above command will not work, because neither the credentials file (`/matrix/postgres/env-postgres-psql`), nor the `matrix-postgres` container is available.
To rename to a different path, pass some extra flags to the command above, like this: `--extra-vars="postgres_auto_upgrade_backup_data_path=/another/disk/matrix-postgres-before-upgrade"`
The auto-upgrade-backup directory stays around forever, until you **manually decide to delete it**.
As part of the upgrade, the database is dumped to `/tmp`, an upgraded and empty Postgres server is started, and then the dump is restored into the new server.
To use a different directory for the dump, pass some extra flags to the command above, like this: `--extra-vars="postgres_dump_dir=/directory/to/dump/here"`
PostgreSQL can be tuned to make it run faster. This is done by passing extra arguments to Postgres with the `matrix_postgres_process_extra_arguments` variable. You should use a website like https://pgtune.leopard.in.ua/ or information from https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Tuning_Your_PostgreSQL_Server to determine what Postgres settings you should change.
**Note**: the configuration generator at https://pgtune.leopard.in.ua/ adds spaces around the `=` sign, which is invalid. You'll need to remove it manually (`max_connections = 300` -> `max_connections=300`)
These are not recommended values and they may not work well for you. This is just to give you an idea of some of the options that can be set. If you are an experienced PostgreSQL admin feel free to update this documentation with better examples.
Here is an example config for a small 2 core server with 4GB of RAM and SSD storage:
```
matrix_postgres_process_extra_arguments: [
"-c 'shared_buffers=128MB'",
"-c 'effective_cache_size=2304MB'",
"-c 'effective_io_concurrency=100'",
"-c 'random_page_cost=2.0'",
"-c 'min_wal_size=500MB'",
]
```
Here is an example config for a large 6 core server with 24GB of RAM: