----- Original Message ---- From: Greg Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: pgsql-general@postgresql.org Sent: Sunday, February 3, 2008 8:43:28 PM Subject: Re: [GENERAL] Performance problems with Postgresql/ZFS/Non-global zones on Solaris?
On Thu, 31 Jan 2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I haven't done any tuning as of yet. I'm running with the default > settings produced by initdb. The default settings are junk and the disk pattern will change once they're set correctly, so tuning ZFS first and then PostgreSQL is probably backwards. You may return to tuning the database again after ZFS, but for the first shot I'd start with a somewhat tuned DB server and then play with the filesystem. Put the major postgresql.conf parameters in the right ballpark--shared_buffers, effective_cache_size, and a large setting for checkpoint_segments since I think you mentioned a write-heavy benchmark. You should do your own experiments with wal_sync_method, I haven't seen any tests that are really definitive on the best setting there for S10+ZFS and it kind of depends on the underlying hardware--try both open_datasync and fdatasync. Greg, Thanks for the reply. Unfortunately, the project I'm working is trying to provide "database-as-a-service" functionality, so I can't really tune the DB since the application/load will vary by customer (and the whole idea was to abstract all the low-level tuning parameters from the customer because we aren't expecting "power" users). Bob