Re: O_DIRECT support for Windows - Mailing list pgsql-patches
From | Chuck McDevitt |
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Subject | Re: O_DIRECT support for Windows |
Date | |
Msg-id | EB48EBF3B239E948AC1E3F3780CF8F88018BB32B@MI8NYCMAIL02.Mi8.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | O_DIRECT support for Windows (ITAGAKI Takahiro <itagaki.takahiro@oss.ntt.co.jp>) |
Responses |
Re: O_DIRECT support for Windows
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List | pgsql-patches |
People seem to be confusing sector size and cluster size. Microsoft Windows assumes sectors are 8k or less on hard drives (99% are 512 bytes). Cluster size is the allocation unit. On windows, this can be 512 to 256k (max 64k with 512 byte sectors). NTFS (which I think we need) is limited to 64k, last I looked. On RAID devices, the allocation unit might actually be larger, but usually the *sector* size of these devices is still 8k or less (usually, they mimic the 512 byte sector size, because too much software assumes this) Non-buffered I/Os don't need to be cluster boundary aligned, only sector aligned. And that restriction is only for certain drivers and devices. Many don't enforce the restriction. But to be safe, sector alignment is best, because there are some drivers that care. -----Original Message----- From: pgsql-patches-owner@postgresql.org [mailto:pgsql-patches-owner@postgresql.org] On Behalf Of Takayuki Tsunakawa Sent: Tuesday, January 16, 2007 4:53 PM To: Magnus Hagander Cc: ITAGAKI Takahiro; pgsql-patches@postgresql.org Subject: Re: [pgsql-patches] O_DIRECT support for Windows Hello, Magnus-san, Itagaki-san From: "Magnus Hagander" <magnus@hagander.net> >> I think many people can benefit from Itagaki-san's proposal, and >> NO_BUFFERING should be default. Isn't it very rare that disks with >> sector size larger than 8KB are used? > > Definitly very rare. > > >> Providing a way (such as >> wal_sync_method) to avoid NO_BUFFERING is sufficient for people in >> rare environments. Or, by determining the sector size with >> GetDiskFreeSpaceEx(), we could auto-switch to not using NO_BUFFERING >> when the sector size is larger than 8KB. > > I think the second one is better. Thank you for agreeing. Then, I hope Itagaki-san's patch will be accepted when the following treatments are added to the patch and some performance report is delivered. 1. On Windows, O_DIRECT (and O_SYNC?) is default for WAL. 2. Auto-switch to not using O_DIRECT if the sector size is larger than 8KB when the server starts. > A quick google shows some inconclusive results :-)BUt look at for > example: > http://groups.google.se/group/microsoft.public.sqlserver.server/tree/bro wse_frm/thread/d3288d3b43338b47/ff5e825dd02faff4?rnum=1&hl=en&q=ntfs+sec tor+size&_done=%2Fgroup%2Fmicrosoft.public.sqlserver.server%2Fbrowse_frm %2Fthread%2Fd3288d3b43338b47%2Fff5e825dd02faff4%3Ftvc%3D1%26q%3Dntfs+sec tor+size%26hl%3Den%26#doc_4556b64132b3baa7 > > This seems to indicate that *Windows* supports sector sizes >4K, but SQL > Server doesn't. But again, it could be a mixup between cluster and > sector size... This is interesting. I've never seen systems with a sector size larger than 4KB, too. On IBM zSeries (which is a mainframe running Linux), DASD (direct attached storage device) is usually used as a hard disk. The sector size of DASD is 4KB. So, the current implementation of PostgreSQL which assumes 8KB sector size is practically sufficient. Delivering an intuitive error message like SQL Server is one way when PostgreSQL encounters devices with a larger sector size than is supported. However, as you say, auto-switching to not using NO_BUFFERING is kinder to users. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: don't forget to increase your free space map settings
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