On 19.01.2018 20:03, Claudio Freire wrote:
On Fri, Jan 19, 2018 at 1:53 PM, Konstantin Knizhnik
<k.knizh...@postgrespro.ru <mailto:k.knizh...@postgrespro.ru>> wrote:
On 19.01.2018 19:28, Pavel Stehule wrote:
When I've been thinking about adding a built-in
connection pool, my
rough plan was mostly "bgworker doing something like
pgbouncer" (that
is, listening on a separate port and proxying everything
to regular
backends). Obviously, that has pros and cons, and
probably would not
work serve the threading use case well.
And we will get the same problem as with pgbouncer: one
process will not be able to handle all connections...
Certainly it is possible to start several such scheduling
bgworkers... But in any case it is more efficient to
multiplex session in backend themselves.
pgbouncer hold all time client connect. When we implement the
listeners, then all work can be done by worker processes not by
listeners.
Sorry, I do not understand your point.
In my case pgbench establish connection to the pgbouncer only
once at the beginning of the test.
And pgbouncer spends all time in context switches (CPU usage is
100% and it is mostly in kernel space: top of profile are kernel
functions).
The same picture will be if instead of pgbouncer you will do such
scheduling in one bgworker.
For the modern systems are not able to perform more than several
hundreds of connection switches per second.
So with single multiplexing thread or process you can not get
speed more than 100k, while at powerful NUMA system it is possible
to achieve millions of TPS.
It is illustrated by the results I have sent in the previous mail:
by spawning 10 instances of pgbouncer I was able to receive 7
times bigger speed.
I'm sure pgbouncer can be improved. I've seen async code handle
millions of packets per second (zmq), pgbouncer shouldn't be radically
different.
With pgbouncer you will never be able to use prepared statements which
slows down simple queries almost twice (unless my patch with
autoprepared statements is committed).
--
Konstantin Knizhnik
Postgres Professional: http://www.postgrespro.com
The Russian Postgres Company