On Fri, Mar 3, 2023 at 10:55 AM Justin Pryzby <pry...@telsasoft.com> wrote: > Thanks for looking. If your zstd library is compiled with thread > support, could you also try with :workers=N ? I believe this is working > correctly, but I'm going to ask for help verifying that...
Unfortunately not (Ubuntu 20.04): pg_dump: error: could not set compression parameter: Unsupported parameter But that lets me review the error! I think these error messages should say which options caused them. > It'd be especially useful to test under windows, where pgdump/restore > use threads instead of forking... If you have a windows environment but > not set up for development, I think it's possible to get cirrusci to > compile a patch for you and then retrieve the binaries provided as an > "artifact" (credit/blame for this idea should be directed to Thomas > Munro). I should be able to do that next week. > > With this particular dataset, I don't see much improvement with > > zstd:long. > > Yeah. I this could be because either 1) you already got very good > comprssion without looking at more data; and/or 2) the neighboring data > is already very similar, maybe equally or more similar, than the further > data, from which there's nothing to gain. What kinds of improvements do you see with your setup? I'm wondering when we would suggest that people use it. > I don't want to start exposing lots of fine-granined parameters at this > point. In the immediate case, it looks like it may require more than > just adding another parameter: > > Note: If windowLog is set to larger than 27, > --long=windowLog or --memory=windowSize needs to be passed to the > decompressor. Hm. That would complicate things. Thanks, --Jacob