Re: Load Distributed Checkpoints, take 3
От | Gregory Stark |
---|---|
Тема | Re: Load Distributed Checkpoints, take 3 |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 878xa6tk4j.fsf@oxford.xeocode.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Load Distributed Checkpoints, take 3 (Greg Smith <gsmith@gregsmith.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: Load Distributed Checkpoints, take 3
|
Список | pgsql-patches |
"Greg Smith" <gsmith@gregsmith.com> writes: > If you write them twice, so what? You didn't even get to that point as an > option until all the important stuff was taken care of and the system was > near idle. Well even if it's near idle you were still occupying the i/o system for a few milliseconds. If someone else came in with a block request at that time you extended their response time by that much. > The elimination of the all-scan background writer means that true hot and dirty > spots in the buffer cache, like popular index blocks on a heavily updated table > that never get a zero usage_count, are never going to be written out other than > as part of the checkpoint process. If they're really popular blocks on a heavily updated table then they really don't buy us anything to write them out unnecessarily. The case where they help us is when they weren't really popular but we're not doing enough to get around to writing them out and then when we do need to write it out the system's busy. In that case we wasted a chance to write them out when the system was more idle. But don't forget that we're still going through the OS's buffers. That will smooth out a lot of the i/o we generate anyways. Just because Postgres is idle doesn't mean the OS isn't busy flushing the buffers we wrote out when it was busy. > That's OK for now, but I'd like it to be the case that one day the > database's I/O scheduling would eventually get to those, in order to > optimize performance in the kind of bursty scenarios I've been mentioning > lately. I think the feeling is that the bursty scenarios are really corner cases. Heikki described a case where you're dirtying tons of blocks without triggering any WAL. That can happen but it's pretty peculiar. I can imagine a scenario where you have a system that's very busy for 60s and then idle for 60s repeatedly. And for some reason you configure a checkpoint_timeout on the order of 20m or so (assuming you're travelling precisely 60mph). In that scenario bgwriter's lru scan has to fight to keep up for 60s while it's mostly writing out dirty pages that it could have flushed out during the idle time. Effectively you're only making use of half the i/o bandwidth since bgwriter doesn't do any work for half the duty cycle. -- Gregory Stark EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
В списке pgsql-patches по дате отправления: