Re: What constitutes "reproducible" numbers from pgbench? - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Andy Colson
Subject Re: What constitutes "reproducible" numbers from pgbench?
Date
Msg-id 5538FB2A.9020504@squeakycode.net
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: What constitutes "reproducible" numbers from pgbench?  (<Holger.Friedrich-Fa-Trivadis@it.nrw.de>)
List pgsql-general
On 4/23/2015 4:07 AM, Holger.Friedrich-Fa-Trivadis@it.nrw.de wrote:
> On Tuesday, April 21, 2015 7:43 PM, Andy Colson wrote:
>> On 4/21/2015 9:21 AM, Holger.Friedrich-Fa-Trivadis@it.nrw.de wrote:
>>> Exactly what constitutes "reproducible" values from pgbench?  I keep
>>> getting a range between 340 tps and 440 tps or something like that
>> I think its common to get different timings.  I think its ok because things are changing (files, caches, indexes,
etc).
>
> Qingqing Zhou wrote that the range between 340 tps and 440 tps I keep getting is not ok and numbers should be the
samewithin several per cent.  Of course, if other things are going on on the physical server, I can't always expect a
closematch. 
>

I disagree.  Having a reproducible test withing a few percent is a great
result.  But any result is informative.  You're tests tell you an upper
and lower bound on performance.  It tells you to expect a little
variance in your work load.  It probably tells you a little about how
your vm host is caching writes to disk.  You are feeling the pulse of
your hardware.  Each hardware setup has its own pulse, and understanding
it will help you understand how it'll handle a load.

-Andy


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