Re: Shared buffers, db transactions commited, and write IO on Solaris

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От Erik Jones
Тема Re: Shared buffers, db transactions commited, and write IO on Solaris
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Msg-id 606E8491-AAFB-493E-8FFA-FF26D6DD5ACE@myemma.com
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Ответ на Re: Shared buffers, db transactions commited, and write IO on Solaris  ("dimitri k" <dimitrik.fr@gmail.com>)
Ответы Re: Shared buffers, db transactions commited, and write IO on Solaris  (Dimitri <dimitrik.fr@gmail.com>)
Список pgsql-performance
On Mar 29, 2007, at 12:41 PM, dimitri k wrote:

On 3/29/07, Erik Jones <erik@myemma.com> wrote:
On Mar 29, 2007, at 11:16 AM, Tom Lane wrote:

> Erik Jones <erik@myemma.com> writes:
>> We've recently made a couple changes to our system that have resulted
>> in a drastic increase in performance as well as some very confusing
>> changes to the database statistics, specifically
>> pg_stat_database.xact_commit.  Here's the details:
>
> I'm kinda boggled too.  I can see how increasing shared buffers could
> result in a drastic reduction in write rate, if the working set of
> your
> queries fits in the new space but didn't fit in the old.  I have no
> idea
> how that leads to a drop in number of transactions committed though.
> It doesn't make sense that autovac would run less frequently, because
> it's driven by number of tuples changed not number of disk writes; and
> that could hardly account for a 10x drop anyway.
>
> Did you by any chance take note of exactly which processes were
> generating all the I/O or the CPU load?

Well, wrt to the CPU load, as I said, we're pretty sure that's
autovac as we still get spikes that hit about the same threshold,
after which cache hits go up dramatically and the spikes just don't
last two days anymore.

As far as the procs responsible for the writes go, we were unable to
see that from the OS level as the guy we had as a systems admin last
year totally screwed us with the way he set up the SunCluster on the
boxes and we have been unable to run Dtrace which has left us
watching a lot of iostat.  However, we did notice a direct
correlation between write spikes and "write intensive" queries like
large COPYs, UPDATEs, and INSERTs.

One very important thing to note here is that the number, or rather
rate, of disk writes has not changed.  It's the volume of data in
those writes that has dropped, along with those transaction
mysterious counts.  Could the bgwriter be the culprit here?  Does
anything it does get logged as a transaction?

erik jones <erik@myemma.com>
software developer
615-296-0838
emma(r)




Erik,

using 'forcedirectio' simply brings your write operations to the
*real* volume - means while you need to write 10 bytes you'll write 10
bytes (instead of UFS block size (8K)). So it explains me why your
write volume became slower.

Sorry, that's not true.  Google "ufs forcedirectio" go to the first link and you will find:

"forcedirectio

The forcedirectio (read "force direct IO") UFS option causes data to be buffered in kernel address whenever data is transferred between user address space and the disk. In other words, it bypasses the file system cache. For certain types of applications -- primarily database systems -- this option can dramatically improve performance. In fact, some database experts have argued that a file using the forcedirectio option will outperform a raw partition, though this opinion seems fairly controversial.

The forcedirectio improves file system performance by eliminating double buffering, providing a small, efficient code path for file system reads and writes and removing pressure on memory."

However, what this does mean is that writes will be at the actual filesystem block size and not the cache block size (8K v. 512K).


Now, why TX number is reduced - is a small mystery :)

Options:
  - you really do 10 times less commits, means you work 10 times slower? ;)
    what about users? how do you measure your work performance?

We are an email marketing service provider with a web front end application.  We measure work performance via web requests (counts, types, etc...), mailer activity and the resulting database activity.  We are doing as much or more work now than previously, and faster.


  - TX reported in pg_* tables are not exact, but I don't believe at all :)

Even if they aren't exact, being off by a factor of 10 wouldn't be believable.  the forcedirectio mount setting for ufs can definitely explain the drop in data written volume, but doesn't do much to explain the difference in xact commits.

erik jones <erik@myemma.com>
software developer
615-296-0838
emma(r)



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