--- On Mon, 11/4/11, Scott Marlowe <scott.marlowe@gmail.com> wrote:
> From: Scott Marlowe <scott.marlowe@gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: [PERFORM] Linux: more cores = less concurrency.
> To: "Glyn Astill" <glynastill@yahoo.co.uk>
> Cc: "Kevin Grittner" <Kevin.Grittner@wicourts.gov>, "Joshua D. Drake" <jd@commandprompt.com>,
pgsql-performance@postgresql.org
> Date: Monday, 11 April, 2011, 21:52
> On Mon, Apr 11, 2011 at 1:42 PM, Glyn
> Astill <glynastill@yahoo.co.uk>
> wrote:
>
> > A wild guess is something like multiple cores
> contending for cpu cache, cpu affinity, or some kind of
> contention in the kernel, alas a little out of my depth.
> >
> > It's pretty sickening to think I can't get anything
> else out of more than 8 cores.
>
> Have you tried running the memory stream benchmark Greg
> Smith had
> posted here a while back? It'll let you know if
> you're memory is
> bottlenecking. Right now my 48 core machines are the
> king of that
> benchmark with something like 70+Gig a second.
>
No I haven't, but I will first thing tomorow morning. I did run a sysbench memory write test though, if I recall
correctlythat gave me somewhere just over 3000 Mb/s