I will be setting up an instance in the coming days and post the results here.
While reading on the subject, I found this interesting discussion on YCombinator: http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4264754 Sébastien On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 2:41 PM, John R Pierce <pie...@hogranch.com> wrote: > On 08/23/12 11:24 AM, Sébastien Lorion wrote: > >> I think both kind of tests (general and app specific) are complementary >> and useful in their own way. At a minimum, if the general ones fail, why go >> to the expenses of doing the specific ones ? Setting up a meaningful >> application test can take a lot of time and it can be hard to pinpoint >> exactly where in the stack the performance drops occur. The way I see it, >> synthetic benchmarks allow to isolate somewhat the layers and serve as a >> base to validate application tests done later on. It surprises me that >> asking for the general perf behavior of a platform is controversial. >> > > I don't use AWS at all. But, it shouldnt take more than a couple hours > to spin up an instance, populate a pgbench database and run a series of > pgbench runs against it, and do the same against any other sort of system > you wish to use as your reference. > > I like to test with a database about twice the size of the available > memory if I'm testing IO, and I've found that pgbench -i -s ####, for > ####=10000 it generates a 1 billion row table and uses about 150GB (and a > hour or so to initialize on fast IO hardware). I then run pgbench with -c > of about 2-4X the cpu/thread count, and -j of about -c/16, and a -t of at > least 10000 (so each client connection runs 10000 transactions). > > on a modest but decent 2U class 2-socket dedicated server with a decent > raid card and raid10 across enough spindles, I can see numbers as high as > 5000 transactions/second with 15krpm rust, and 7000-8000 with a couple MLC > SSD's striped. trying to raid10 a bunch of SATA 7200 disks gives numbers > more like 1000. using host based raid, without a write-back cache in the > raid card, gives numbers about 1/2 the above. the IOPS during these tests > hit around 12000 or 15000 small writes/second. > > doing this level of IO on a midsized SAN can often cause the SAN CPU to > run at 80%+ so if there's other activity on the SAN from other hosts, good > luck. > > in a heavily virtualized shared-everything environment, I'm guessing your > numbers will be all over the place and difficult to achieve consistency. > > > -- > john r pierce N 37, W 122 > santa cruz ca mid-left coast > > > > > -- > Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org) > To make changes to your subscription: > http://www.postgresql.org/**mailpref/pgsql-general<http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general> >