Re: Postgres performance comments from a MySQL user
От | Tom Lane |
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Тема | Re: Postgres performance comments from a MySQL user |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 7704.1055806526@sss.pgh.pa.us обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Postgres performance comments from a MySQL user (Arjen van der Meijden <acm@tweakers.net>) |
Ответы |
Re: Postgres performance comments from a MySQL user
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Список | pgsql-general |
Arjen van der Meijden <acm@tweakers.net> writes: > Well, then there is not. It would still be nice, however, to know why > queries are faster the second time they're run, even if there is a 100% > cachehit for the first running query. Well, there are non-plan caches involved --- specifically the catalog cache and relation cache. The first query issued against a given table in a session will incur the cost to load the cache entries needed, and the first few queries in a session incur quite a few cache loads to suck in basic information like pg_operator and pg_proc entries for common functions and operators. For example, on my machine with the regression database, the time for explain select * from tenk1 where unique1 = 42; drops from ~18ms first time to ~5ms subsequent times. AFAICS the only thing that could cause that difference is catcache/relcache loading. regards, tom lane
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