On Tue, 2013-07-02 at 14:02 +0200, Andres Freund wrote: > Ok, so you want some benchmark results. I spent 20 minutes concocting some > quick tests. Here you go: > > master (384f933046dc9e9a2b416f5f7b3be30b93587c63): > tps = 155075.448341 (including connections establishing) > tps = 155259.752267 (excluding connections establishing) > > dev (384f933046dc9e9a2b416f5f7b3be30b93587c63 + patch): > tps = 151450.387021 (including connections establishing) > tps = 152512.741161 (excluding connections establishing) > > That's about a 3% regression.
I had a little trouble reproducing this result on my workstation, and my previous tests on the 64-core box didn't seem to show a difference (although I didn't spend a lot of time on it, so perhaps I could try again). I did see some kind of difference, I think. But the fastest run without the patch beat the slowest run with the patch by about 1.4%. The delta generally seemed closer to 0.5%. The noise seemed to be around 2.6%. Why did you do this as a concurrent test? The difference between reading hints and PD_ALL_VISIBLE doesn't seem to have much to do with concurrency. Regardless, this is at least a concrete issue that I can focus on, and I appreciate that. Are scans of small tables the primary objection to this patch, or are there others? If I solve it, will this patch make real progress? Regards, Jeff Davis -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers