El lun, 22 ene 2024 18:44, Amit Sharma 
<amitpg...@gmail.com<mailto:amitpg...@gmail.com>> escribió:
Hi,

We are building new VMs for PostgreSQL v15 on RHEL 8.x For a large database of 
15TB-20TB.

I would like to know from the experts that is it a good idea to create LVMs to 
manage storage for the database?

Or are there any other better options/tools for disk groups in PostgreSQL, 
similar to ASM in Oracle?

Thanks
Amit

Simple question that requires a somewhat more complex answer. There are 
actually 3 metrics to consider:

1) Capacity
Your database doesn't fit on a single disk, so you need to distribute your data 
across several disks. LVM would indeed be an option (as well as ZFS or RAID 
disk arrays)

2) Safety
If you loose 1 disk, your data is at risk, as you're likely to loose all tables 
partially loaded on that disk. LVM is still an option as long as it is 
configured on a RAID array. ZFS can do that natively.

3) Performance
Oracle ADM ensures performance by automatically controlling the distribution of 
the tables. I would need to see on a real case how it is actually done. For 
sure, LVM and ZFS won't have this type of granularity.

On the other hand, you can distribute your data in table partitions to help 
this distribution. It is not automatic but will surely help you to distribute 
your workload.


As he is building VM’s I’m assuming the hardware level has all the redundancy 
for RAID/ZFS/etc.  If that is the case then you don’t want to run RAID/ZFS/etc 
on top of that, let the hardware do its thing.  If my assumption is wrong then 
ignore everything I’m saying.

One thing I found that helps with speed of reads/writes… you can spread your 
read/write load across multiple SCSI controllers/disks using LVM.  For example, 
I’m assuming VMWare which allows 4 SCSI controllers.  Set the OS disk on SCSI 
controller 0, then spread your database disks in sets of 3 across SCSI 
controllers 1-3, IE 3 disks of 5TB each, one on each SCSI controller.  Then 
when you create your LVM partition specify the option to stripe it with 3 
stripes.  That gives you a setup where you are multiplexing reads/writes across 
all 3 SCSI controllers and disks instead of bottlenecking them all through 1 
SCSI controller and disk at a time.

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