Re: Major Performance decrease after some hours - Mailing list pgsql-general
From | Peter Bauer |
---|---|
Subject | Re: Major Performance decrease after some hours |
Date | |
Msg-id | 764c9e910610050455m1d6801e8g45bd338bfe1c4493@mail.gmail.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Major Performance decrease after some hours ("Peter Bauer" <peter.m.bauer@gmail.com>) |
Responses |
Re: Major Performance decrease after some hours
Re: Major Performance decrease after some hours |
List | pgsql-general |
I finished the little benchmarking on our server and the results are quite curios. With the numbers from http://sitening.com/tools/postgresql-benchmark/ in mind i did ./pgbench -i pgbench and then performed some pgbench tests, for example ./pgbench -c 1 -t 1000 -s 1 pgbench starting vacuum...end. transaction type: TPC-B (sort of) scaling factor: 1 number of clients: 1 number of transactions per client: 1000 number of transactions actually processed: 1000/1000 tps = 50.703609 (including connections establishing) tps = 50.709265 (excluding connections establishing) So our server with two 3.00 GHz Xeon CPUs and 2GB has about 5% of the performance of the server described in the article! I did some tests on a Xen machine running on my workstation and the results are about 400-500tps which seems to be quite reasonable. I also tried to disable drbd and put the data directory elsewhere, but the performance was the same. any ideas? thx, Peter 2006/10/5, Alexander Staubo <alex@purefiction.net>: > It appears to me that work_mem is a more significant configuration > option than previously assumed by many PostgreSQL users, myself > included. As with many database optimizations, it's an obscure > problem to diagnose because you generally only observe it through I/O > activity. > > One possibility would be to log a warning whenever work_mem is > exceeded (or exceeded by a certain ratio). I would also love a couple > of new statistics counters tracking the amount of work memory used > and the amount of work memory that has spilled over into pgsql_tmp. > > Alexander. > > On Oct 5, 2006, at 10:48 , Peter Bauer wrote: > > > Hi all, > > > > inspired by the last posting "Weird disk write load caused by > > PostgreSQL?" i increased the work_mem from 1 to 7MB and did some > > loadtest with vacuum every 10 minutes. The system load (harddisk) went > > down and everything was very stable at 80% idle for nearly 24 hours! > > I am currently performing some pgbench runs to evaluate the hardware > > and configuration for the system but i think the biggest problems are > > solved so far. > > > > thx everybody, > > Peter > > > > 2006/10/2, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>: > >> Ray Stell <stellr@cns.vt.edu> writes: > >> > How would one determine the lock situation definitively? Is there > >> > an internal mechanism that can be queried? > >> > >> pg_locks view. > >> > >> regards, tom lane > >> > >> ---------------------------(end of > >> broadcast)--------------------------- > >> TIP 2: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster > >> > > > > ---------------------------(end of > > broadcast)--------------------------- > > TIP 4: Have you searched our list archives? > > > > http://archives.postgresql.org > >
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