Re: WALWriteLock contention
От | Thomas Munro |
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Тема | Re: WALWriteLock contention |
Дата | |
Msg-id | CAEepm=2+e+3-LtU_hSwiNLOWHoyU1xr68f3zh9KKSyZ-P-RL8A@mail.gmail.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: WALWriteLock contention (Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: WALWriteLock contention
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Список | pgsql-hackers |
On Sun, May 17, 2015 at 2:15 PM, Robert Haas <robertmhaas@gmail.com> wrote: > http://oldblog.antirez.com/post/fsync-different-thread-useless.html > > It suggests that an fsync in progress blocks out not only other > fsyncs, but other writes to the same file, which for our purposes is > just awful. More Googling around reveals that this is apparently > well-known to Linux kernel developers and that they don't seem excited > about fixing it. :-( He doesn't say, but I wonder if that is really Linux, or if it is the ext2, 3 and maybe 4 filesystems specifically. This blog post talks about the per-inode mutex that is held while writing with direct IO. Maybe fsyncing buffered IO is similarly constrained in those filesystems. https://www.facebook.com/notes/mysql-at-facebook/xfs-ext-and-per-inode-mutexes/10150210901610933 > <crazy-idea>I wonder if we could write WAL to two different files in > alternation, so that we could be writing to one file which fsync-ing > the other.</crazy-idea> If that is an ext3-specific problem, using multiple files might not help you anyway because ext3 famously fsyncs *all* files when you asked for one file to be fsynced, as discussed in Greg Smith's PostgreSQL 9.0 High Performance in chapter 4 (page 79). -- Thomas Munro http://www.enterprisedb.com
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