Re: Tuning the configuration
От | Mark Kirkwood |
---|---|
Тема | Re: Tuning the configuration |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 548A3103.70203@catalyst.net.nz обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Tuning the configuration (Eric Pierce <epierce@saasmadeeasy.com>) |
Список | pgsql-performance |
On 12/12/14 11:36, Eric Pierce wrote: > > ________________________________________ > From: pgsql-performance-owner@postgresql.org <pgsql-performance-owner@postgresql.org> on behalf of Evgeniy Shishkin <itparanoia@gmail.com> > Sent: Thursday, December 11, 2014 7:11 AM > To: Andrea Suisani > Cc: mfatticcioni@mbigroup.it; pgsql-performance@postgresql.org > Subject: Re: [PERFORM] Tuning the configuration > >> On 11 Dec 2014, at 15:02, Andrea Suisani <sickpig@opinioni.net> wrote: >> >> On 12/10/2014 11:44 AM, Maila Fatticcioni wrote: >>> 2- I would like to use the two SDD to store the wal file. Do you think >>> it is useful or how should I use them? >> >> I definitely would give it a try. >> > > >> I don't understand the logic behind using drives, >> which are best for random io, for sequent io workloads. > >> Better use 10k sas with BBU raid for wal, money wise. > > Very much agree with this. Because SSD is fast doesn't make it suited for certain things, and a streaming sequential 100%write workload is one of them. I've worked with everything from local disk to high-end SAN and even at the high endwe've always put any DB logs on spinning disk. RAID1 is generally sufficient. SSD is king for read heavy random I/Oworkload. > Mind you wal is a little different - the limiting factor is (usually) not raw sequential speed but fsync latency. These days a modern SSD has fsync response pretty much equal to that of a card with BBU + spinners - and has "more" high speed storage available (cards usually have only a 1G or so of RAM on them). regards Mark
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