RE: 8192 BLCKSZ ?
От | Christopher Kings-Lynne |
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Тема | RE: 8192 BLCKSZ ? |
Дата | |
Msg-id | NEBBIOAJBMEENKACLNPCKEJECCAA.chriskl@familyhealth.com.au обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: 8192 BLCKSZ ? ("Mitch Vincent" <mitch@venux.net>) |
Ответы |
Re: 8192 BLCKSZ ?
Re: 8192 BLCKSZ ? |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
I don't believe it's a performance issue, I believe it's that writes to blocks greater than 8k cannot be guaranteed 'atomic' by the operating system. Hence, 32k blocks would break the transactions system. (Or something like that - am I correct?) Chris > -----Original Message----- > From: pgsql-hackers-owner@postgresql.org > [mailto:pgsql-hackers-owner@postgresql.org]On Behalf Of Mitch Vincent > Sent: Tuesday, November 28, 2000 8:40 AM > To: mlw; Hackers List > Subject: Re: [HACKERS] 8192 BLCKSZ ? > > > I've been using a 32k BLCKSZ for months now without any trouble, > though I've > not benchmarked it to see if it's any faster than one with a > BLCKSZ of 8k.. > > -Mitch > > > This is just a curiosity. > > > > Why is the default postgres block size 8192? These days, with caching > > file systems, high speed DMA disks, hundreds of megabytes of RAM, maybe > > even gigabytes. Surely, 8K is inefficient. > > > > Has anyone done any tests to see if a default 32K block would provide a > > better overall performance? 8K seems so small, and 32K looks to be where > > most x86 operating systems seem to have a sweet spot. > > > > If someone has the answer off the top of their head, and I'm just being > > stupid, let me have it. However, I have needed to up the block size to > > 32K for a text management system and have seen no performance problems. > > (It has not been a scientific experiment, admittedly.) > > > > This isn't a rant, but my gut tells me that a 32k block size as default > > would be better, and that smaller deployments should adjust down as > > needed. > > >
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