Обсуждение: [GENERAL] Performance degradation when using auto_explain

Поиск
Список
Период
Сортировка

[GENERAL] Performance degradation when using auto_explain

От
Kisung Kim
Дата:
Hi,

I found performance degradation when using auto_explain with log_analyze option true.
It automatically logs query plan analyze results.

But when there are many concurrent sessions, the performance degrades in proportion to the number of concurrent sessions.
These queries are all read-only queries.
And I found that the time consumed in a plan node like IndexScan takes more times when there are many sessions.

At first, I thought that it may be due to CPU scheduling contentions incurs the degradation.
But there are more CPU cores than the session counts.

And finally I found that auto_explain is the cause of the problem.

I am curious now, why auto_explain incurs contentions between the session?
I use Ubuntu linux. Is it a problem of gettimeofday()?

Thank you.

Kisung Kim
--

                                                                                                                                                       

Bitnine Global Inc., Kisung Kim, Ph.D
https://sites.google.com/site/kisungresearch/
E-mail : kskim@bitnine.net
Office phone : 070-4800-5890, 408-606-8602
US Mobile phone : 408-805-2192

Re: [GENERAL] Performance degradation when using auto_explain

От
Andreas Kretschmer
Дата:
Kisung Kim <kskim@bitnine.net> wrote:

> And finally I found that auto_explain is the cause of the problem.

real hardware or virtual hardware? On virtual there are sometimes
problems with exact timings, please read:

https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/pgtesttiming.html


Regards, Andreas Kretschmer
--
Andreas Kretschmer
http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services


Re: [GENERAL] Performance degradation when using auto_explain

От
Kisung Kim
Дата:


On Wed, Jan 4, 2017 at 1:21 AM, Andreas Kretschmer <akretschmer@spamfence.net> wrote:
Kisung Kim <kskim@bitnine.net> wrote:

> And finally I found that auto_explain is the cause of the problem.

real hardware or virtual hardware? On virtual there are sometimes
problems with exact timings, please read:

https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/pgtesttiming.html


Thank you for your reply.
I use real hardware.
I am curious timing functions have contentions when multi-threads call them.


 

Regards, Andreas Kretschmer
--
Andreas Kretschmer
http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/
PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services


--
Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general



--

                                                                                                                                                       

Bitnine Global Inc., Kisung Kim, Ph.D
https://sites.google.com/site/kisungresearch/
E-mail : kskim@bitnine.net
Office phone : 070-4800-5890, 408-606-8602
US Mobile phone : 408-805-2192

Re: [GENERAL] Performance degradation when using auto_explain

От
Tomas Vondra
Дата:
On 01/04/2017 08:54 PM, Kisung Kim wrote:
>
>
> On Wed, Jan 4, 2017 at 1:21 AM, Andreas Kretschmer
> <akretschmer@spamfence.net <mailto:akretschmer@spamfence.net>> wrote:
>
>     Kisung Kim <kskim@bitnine.net <mailto:kskim@bitnine.net>> wrote:
>
>     > And finally I found that auto_explain is the cause of the problem.
>
>     real hardware or virtual hardware? On virtual there are sometimes
>     problems with exact timings, please read:
>
>     https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/pgtesttiming.html
>     <https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/pgtesttiming.html>
>
>
> Thank you for your reply.
> I use real hardware.
> I am curious timing functions have contentions when multi-threads call them.
>

It's not so much about contention between threads/processes, but mostly
about the cost of actually reading data from the clock source. So even
if you run on physical hardware, the clock source may be slow. Actually,
there may be multiple clock sources available, differing in precision
and overhead.

See:

/sys/devices/system/clocksource/*/available_clocksource

On my machine I see 3 different sources "tsc hpet acpi_pm" and after
running the pg_test_timing tool, linked by Andreas, and I get this for
'tsc' clock source

Testing timing overhead for 3 seconds.
Per loop time including overhead: 29.87 nsec
Histogram of timing durations:
< usec   % of total      count
      1     97.09159   97499400
      2      2.90085    2913031
      4      0.00193       1936
      8      0.00089        891
     16      0.00140       1405
     32      0.00335       3366
     64      0.00000          2

suggesting that 97% of calls took less than 1 usec, which is quite good.
For comparison, using 'hpet' gives me this:

Testing timing overhead for 3 seconds.
Per loop time including overhead: 766.92 ns
Histogram of timing durations:
   < us   % of total      count
      1     27.69558    1083389
      2     71.28437    2788485
      4      0.75748      29631
      8      0.02886       1129
     16      0.06578       2573
     32      0.16755       6554
     64      0.00033         13
    128      0.00003          1
    256      0.00003          1

Which is clearly much worse (it increased the per-loop cost from 30ns to
767ns, which is ~25x more).

So check which clock source you have selected, and test how expensive
that is. But even with a fast clock source, the additional timing
overhead may make EXPLAIN ANALYZE considerably slower. There's not much
we can do about it :-(

And to make matters worse, it may affect different plans differently
(e.g. nested loop joins do many more gettimeofday calls than other join
types, amplifying the timing costs).

But the question is whether you actually need the timing - the total
duration + row counts are far more important in my experience, so by setting

auto_explain.log_analyze = on
auto_explain.log_timing = off

you may significantly reduce the impact on query performance, while
retaining the most valuable information.

regards

--
Tomas Vondra                  http://www.2ndQuadrant.com
PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services