Sergey Prokhorenko sergeyprokhore...@yahoo.com.au 

    On Friday 29 November 2024 at 09:19:33 am GMT+3, Masahiko Sawada 
<sawada.m...@gmail.com> wrote:  
 
 On Thu, Nov 28, 2024 at 8:13 PM Sergey Prokhorenko
<sergeyprokhore...@yahoo.com.au> wrote:
>
> I mean to add not benchmark results to the patch, but functions so that 
> everyone can compare themselves on their equipment. The comparison with 
> UUIDv4 is not very interesting, as the choice is usually between UUIDv7 and 
> an integer key. And I have described many use cases, and in your benchmark 
> there is only one, the simplest.

I don't think we should add such benchmark functions at least to this
patch. If there already is a well-established workload using UUIDv7
and UUIDv4 etc, users can use pgbench with custom scripts, or it might
make sense to add it to pgbench as a built-in workload. Which however
should be a separate patch. Having said that, I think users should use
benchmarks that fit their workloads, and it would not be easy to
establish workloads that are reasonable for most systems.

Regards,

-- 
Masahiko Sawada
Amazon Web Services: https://aws.amazon.com






Workloads can and must be added with parameters. Typically, companies use test 
tables of 10,000 and 1,000,000 records, etc. Different companies have mostly 
similar usage scenarios (for example, incremental loading). Each company has to 
duplicate the work of others, creating the same benchmarks. The worst thing is 
that this is entrusted to incompetent employees who are not very good at 
understanding typical key usage scenarios. As a rule, these are programmers, 
not system analysts. Accordingly, the solution in 99% of cases will be in favor 
of integer keys, as they take up less space and are generated faster. If we 
leave this problem until the next patch, it will take us a year and a half. 
This is completely wrong.

  

Reply via email to