On Sun, Oct 26, 2003, Mike Silbersack wrote: > > On Sat, 25 Oct 2003, David Schultz wrote: > > > But regardless of the approach, someone has yet to demonstrate > > that this is actually a performance problem in the real world. ;-) > > I could be way wrong, but I would think that a database might mmap > discontiguous segments of memory. Perhaps someone familiar with > mysql/postgres/others might know if they would be a good benchmark.
I'm not particularly ``familiar'' with postgres, but I did some performance tests on it a little while ago. Grepping through one of the traces just now, I found that database system made 139 calls to mmap(), and the maximum number of regions mapped at any given time was 39.[1] I don't have execution times for the mmap() calls in this trace anymore, but with 139 of them total, I'm sure the overhead is minimal. Nevertheless, it's certainly possible that a reasonable ``mmap-bound'' application could exist; I just don't think it's very likely. > Actually, relating to this, didn't phk request a VM function which would > remap a page (or contiguous segment of pages) to a new address which had > free space after it? I believe that he needed such a feature to > turbocharge realloc(). It sounds like the freelist mode of operation > would make that more feasible. What he requested (at least in the malloc.c comments) was the ability to do a virtual move of malloc's main directory so that it can be expanded without copying it to a new location. You can't do this with mmap() because there's no ``handle'' with which to refer to anonymous memory regions from userland, and there are problems with malloc using a file descriptor. In any case, this issue is orthogonal, since malloc only needs one such directory at a time. [1] This is very approximate because it doesn't count shared libraries, and the little awk script I wrote doesn't account for the possibility that postgres might unmap a smaller region than the one it mapped. _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"