Re: Optimisation help - Mailing list pgsql-performance
From | dforums |
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Subject | Re: Optimisation help |
Date | |
Msg-id | 47CDEF5B.8080905@vieonet.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: Optimisation help (Greg Smith <gsmith@gregsmith.com>) |
Responses |
Re: Optimisation help
|
List | pgsql-performance |
Hello, After controling the settings I so, that shared_buffers is configurated at 1024 (the default), however, in my postgresql.conf I set it to 250000, is it due to shared memory settings, should I increase shmmax? regards david Greg Smith a écrit : > On Tue, 4 Mar 2008, dforums wrote: > >> max_connections = 256 >> shared_buffers = 1500 # min 16 or max_connections*2, >> 8KB each >> work_mem = 22000 # min 64, size in KB >> effective_cache_size = 2048 # typically 8KB each > > Well, you're giving the main database server a whopping 1500*8K=12MB of > space to work with. Meanwhile you're giving each of the 256 clients up > to 22MB of work_mem, which means they can use 5.6GB total. This is > quite backwards. > > Increase shared_buffers to something like 250000 (2GB), decrease > work_mem to at most 10000 and probably lower, and raise > effective_cache_size to something like 5GB=625000. Whatever data you've > collected about performance with your current settings is pretty much > meaningless with only giving 12MB of memory to shared_buffers and having > a tiny setting for effective_cache_size. > > Oh, and make sure you ANALYZE your tables regularly. > >> random_page_cost = 3 > > And you shouldn't be playing with that until you've got the memory usage > to something sane. > > Also, you didn't mention what version of PostgreSQL you're using. > You'll need 8.1 or later to have any hope of using 8GB of RAM > effectively on a 4-core system. > >> But My most fear is that for now the database is only of 10 Go. But I >> will have to increase it 10 times during the next six month I'm afraid >> that these problems will increase. > > It's very unlikely you will be able to get good performance on a 100GB > database with a single SATA drive. You should be able to get great > performance with the current size though. > >> In regards of update, I have around 10000 updates while a laps of 10 >> minutes. Is there a settings to optimise updates ? > > 10000 updates / 600 seconds = 17 updates/second. That's trivial; even a > single boring drive can get 100/second. As someone already suggested > your real problem here is that you'll be hard pressed to handle the > amount of seeking that goes into a larger database with only a single > drive. > > -- > * Greg Smith gsmith@gregsmith.com http://www.gregsmith.com Baltimore, MD > > -- > Sent via pgsql-performance mailing list (pgsql-performance@postgresql.org) > To make changes to your Subscription: > http://mail.postgresql.org/mj/mj_wwwusr?domain=postgresql.org&extra=pgsql-performance > > >
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