Andres Freund <and...@anarazel.de> writes:
> On 2018-07-20 16:43:33 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
>> On my RHEL6 machine, with unmodified HEAD and 8 sessions (since I've
>> only got 8 cores) but other parameters matching Mithun's example,
>> I just got

> It's *really* common to have more actual clients than cpus for oltp
> workloads, so I don't think it's insane to test with more clients.

I finished a set of runs using similar parameters to Mithun's test except
for using 8 clients, and another set using 72 clients (but, being
impatient, 5-minute runtime) just to verify that the results wouldn't
be markedly different.  I got TPS numbers like this:

                                8 clients       72 clients

unmodified HEAD                 16112           16284
with padding patch              16096           16283
with SysV semas                 15926           16064
with padding+SysV               15949           16085

This is on RHEL6 (kernel 2.6.32-754.2.1.el6.x86_64), hardware is dual
4-core Intel E5-2609 (Sandy Bridge era).  This hardware does show NUMA
effects, although no doubt less strongly than Mithun's machine.

I would like to see some other results with a newer kernel.  I tried to
repeat this test on a laptop running Fedora 28, but soon concluded that
anything beyond very short runs was mainly going to tell me about thermal
throttling :-(.  I could possibly get repeatable numbers from, say,
1-minute SELECT-only runs, but that would be a different test scenario,
likely one with a lot less lock contention.

Anyway, for me, the padding change is a don't-care.  Given that both
Mithun and Thomas showed some positive effect from it, I'm not averse
to applying it.  I'm still -1 on going back to SysV semas.

                        regards, tom lane

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