Gregory Smith <gregsmithpg...@gmail.com> writes: > Pushing SELECT statements at socket speeds with prepared statements is a > synthetic benchmark that normally demos big pgbench numbers. My benchmark > farm moved to Ubuntu 23.04/kernel 6.2.0-20 last month, and that test is > badly broken on the system PG15 at larger core counts, with as much as an > 85% drop from expectations. > ... I could use some confirmation of where this happens from > other tester's hardware and Linux kernels.
FWIW, I can't reproduce any such effect with PG HEAD on RHEL 8.8 (4.18.0 kernel) or Fedora 37 (6.2.14 kernel). Admittedly this is with less-beefy hardware than you're using, but your graphs say this should be obvious with even a dozen clients, and I don't see that. I'm getting results like $ pgbench -S -T 10 -c 16 -j 16 -M prepared pgbench tps = 472503.628370 (without initial connection time) $ pgbench -S -T 10 -c 16 -j 16 pgbench tps = 297844.301319 (without initial connection time) which is about what I'd expect. Could it be that the breakage is Ubuntu-specific? Seems unlikely, but ... regards, tom lane