On Jan 13, 2014, at 15:40, Andres Freund <and...@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
> On 2014-01-13 15:15:16 -0500, Robert Haas wrote: >> On Mon, Jan 13, 2014 at 1:51 PM, Kevin Grittner <kgri...@ymail.com> wrote: >>> I notice, Josh, that you didn't mention the problems many people >>> have run into with Transparent Huge Page defrag and with NUMA >>> access. >> >> Amen to that. Actually, I think NUMA can be (mostly?) fixed by >> setting zone_reclaim_mode; is there some other problem besides that? > > I think that fixes some of the worst instances, but I've seen machines > spending horrible amounts of CPU (& BUS) time in page reclaim > nonetheless. If I analyzed it correctly it's in RAM << working set > workloads where RAM is pretty large and most of it is used as page > cache. The kernel ends up spending a huge percentage of time finding and > potentially defragmenting pages when looking for victim buffers. > >> On a related note, there's also the problem of double-buffering. When >> we read a page into shared_buffers, we leave a copy behind in the OS >> buffers, and similarly on write-out. It's very unclear what to do >> about this, since the kernel and PostgreSQL don't have intimate >> knowledge of what each other are doing, but it would be nice to solve >> somehow. > > I've wondered before if there wouldn't be a chance for postgres to say > "my dear OS, that the file range 0-8192 of file x contains y, no need to > reread" and do that when we evict a page from s_b but I never dared to > actually propose that to kernel people... O_DIRECT was specifically designed to solve the problem of double buffering between applications and the kernel. Why are you not able to use that in these situations? Cheers, Trond -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers