Re: Query caching
От | Frank Joerdens |
---|---|
Тема | Re: Query caching |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 20001101110832.B6798@rakete.joerdens.de обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Query caching ("Poul L. Christiansen" <poulc@cs.auc.dk>) |
Список | pgsql-general |
On Wed, Nov 01, 2000 at 10:16:58AM +0000, Poul L. Christiansen wrote: > PostgreSQL hits the disk on UPDATE/DELETE/INSERT operations. SELECT's > are cached, but the default cache is only ½MB of RAM. You can change > this to whatever you want. That sound like a very cool thing to do, and the default seems awfully conservative, given the average server´s RAM equipment nowadays. If you have a small Linux server with 128 MB of RAM, it would be interesting to see what happens, performance-wise, if you increase the cache for selects to, for instance, 64 MB. Has anyone tried to benchmark this? How would you benchmark it? Where do you change this cache size? How do you keep the cache from being swapped out to disk (which would presumably all but eradicate the benefits of such a measure)? Cheers Frank -- frank joerdens joerdens new media urbanstr. 116 10967 berlin germany e: frank@joerdens.de t: +49 (0)30 69597650 f: +49 (0)30 7864046 h: http://www.joerdens.de pgp public key: http://www.joerdens.de/pgp/frank_joerdens.asc
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