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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T16:28:25+00:00 2026-05-13T16:28:25+00:00

I have a mobile application sync process. The transaction does a lot of modification

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I have a mobile application sync process. The transaction does a lot of modification on the database. Since this is done on mobile I need to issue a VACUUM to compact the database.

I am wondering when should I issue a VACUUM

  • in the transaction, as final statement
  • or after the transaction?

I am currently looking for SQLite, but if it’s different for other engines, let me know in the answers (PostgreSQL, MySQL, Oracle, SQLServer)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T16:28:25+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 4:28 pm

    I would say outside of the transaction. Certainly in PostgreSQL, VACUUM is designed to remove the “dead” tuples (i.e. the old row when a record has been changed or deleted.)

    If you’re running VACUUM in a transaction that has modified records, these dead rows won’t have been marked for deletion.

    Depending on which type of VACUUM you’re doing, it may also require a table lock which will block if there are other transactions running, so you could potentially end up in a deadlock situation (transaction 1 is blocked waiting for a table lock to do its VACUUM, transaction 2 gets blocked waiting for a row to be released that transaction 1 has locked.)

    I’d also recommend that this isn’t done in an application (perhaps as a scheduled task) as it can take a while to complete and can negatively affect speed of other queries.

    As for SQL Server, there is no VACUUM – what you’re looking for is shrink. You can turn on auto shrink in 2005 which will automatically reclaim space when it the server decides, or issue a DBCC statement to shrink the database and log file, but this depends on your backup routine and strategy on a per-database level.

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