Re: checkpoint patches
От | Jim Nasby |
---|---|
Тема | Re: checkpoint patches |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 4F6F800D.8000808@nasby.net обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: checkpoint patches (Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: checkpoint patches
Re: checkpoint patches |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
On 3/23/12 7:38 AM, Robert Haas wrote: > And here are the latency results for 95th-100th percentile with > checkpoint_timeout=16min. > > ckpt.master.13: 1703, 1830, 2166, 17953, 192434, 43946669 > ckpt.master.14: 1728, 1858, 2169, 15596, 187943, 9619191 > ckpt.master.15: 1700, 1835, 2189, 22181, 206445, 8212125 > > The picture looks similar here. Increasing checkpoint_timeout isn't > *quite* as good as spreading out the fsyncs, but it's pretty darn > close. For example, looking at the median of the three 98th > percentile numbers for each configuration, the patch bought us a 28% > improvement in 98th percentile latency. But increasing > checkpoint_timeout by a minute bought us a 15% improvement in 98th > percentile latency. So it's still not clear to me that the patch is > doing anything on this test that you couldn't get just by increasing > checkpoint_timeout by a few more minutes. Granted, it lets you keep > your inter-checkpoint interval slightly smaller, but that's not that > exciting. That having been said, I don't have a whole lot of trouble > believing that there are other cases where this is more worthwhile. I wouldn't be too quick to dismiss increasing checkpoint frequency (ie: decreasing checkpoint_timeout). On a high-value production system you're going to care quite a bit about recovery time. I certainly wouldn't want to runour systems with checkpoint_timeout='15 min' if I could avoid it. Another $0.02: I don't recall the community using pg_bench much at all to measure latency... I believe it's something fairlynew. I point this out because I believe there are differences in analysis that you need to do for TPS vs latency. Ithink Robert's graphs support my argument; the numeric X-percentile data might not look terribly good, but reducing peaklatency from 100ms to 60ms could be a really big deal on a lot of systems. My intuition is that one or both of thesepatches actually would be valuable in the real world; it would be a shame to throw them out because we're not sure howto performance test them... -- Jim C. Nasby, Database Architect jim@nasby.net 512.569.9461 (cell) http://jim.nasby.net
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