I have finished a first run of benchmarking the current 9.1 code at various sizes. See http://www.2ndquadrant.us/pgbench-results/index.htm for many details. The interesting stuff is in Test Set 3, near the bottom. That's the first one that includes buffer_backend_fsync data. This iall on ext3 so far, but is using a newer 2.6.32 kernel, the one from Ubuntu 10.04.

The results are classic Linux in 2010: latency pauses from checkpoint sync will easily leave the system at a dead halt for a minute, with the worst one observed this time dropping still for 108 seconds. That one is weird, but these two are completely averge cases:

http://www.2ndquadrant.us/pgbench-results/210/index.html
http://www.2ndquadrant.us/pgbench-results/215/index.html

I think a helpful next step here would be to put Robert's fsync compaction patch into here and see if that helps. There are enough backend syncs showing up in the difficult workloads (scale>=1000, clients >=32) that its impact should be obvious.

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Greg Smith   2ndQuadrant US    g...@2ndquadrant.com   Baltimore, MD
PostgreSQL Training, Services, and 24x7 Support  www.2ndQuadrant.us
"PostgreSQL 9.0 High Performance": http://www.2ndQuadrant.com/books


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