Re: Postgresql 9.4 and ZFS?
От | Jim Nasby |
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Тема | Re: Postgresql 9.4 and ZFS? |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 560DAACD.4020904@BlueTreble.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Postgresql 9.4 and ZFS? (Joseph Kregloh <jkregloh@sproutloud.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: Postgresql 9.4 and ZFS?
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Список | pgsql-general |
On 10/1/15 8:50 AM, Joseph Kregloh wrote: > In my testing with pgbench I actually saw a decrease in performance with > a ZIL enabled. I ended up just keeping the L2ARC and dropping the. ZIL > will not provide you with any speed boost as a database. On a NAS with > NFS shared for example, a ZIL would work well. ZIL is more for data > protection than anything. > > I run in Production FreeBSD 10.1 with an NVMe mirror for L2ARC, the rest > of the storage is spinning drives. With a combination of filesystem > compressions. For example, archival tablespaces and the log folder are > on gzip compression on an external array. Faster stuff like the xlog are > lz4 and on an internal array. I'm not a ZFS expert, but my understanding is that a ZIL *that has lower latency than main storage* can be a performance win. This is similar to the idea of giving pg_xlog it's own dedicated volume so that it's not competing with all the other IO traffic every time you do a COMMIT. Recent versions of Postgres go to a lot of trouble to make fsync as painless as possible, so a ZIL might not help much in many cases. Where it could still help is if you're running synchronous_commit = true and you consistently get lower latency on the ZIL than on the vdev's; that will make every COMMIT run faster. (BTW, this is all based on the assumption that ZFS treats fsync as a synchronous request.) -- Jim Nasby, Data Architect, Blue Treble Consulting, Austin TX Experts in Analytics, Data Architecture and PostgreSQL Data in Trouble? Get it in Treble! http://BlueTreble.com
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