Today I got an interesting output from pgbench. The scenario is executing SELECT pg_sleep(0.1).
$ cat test.sql select pg_sleep(0.1); $ pgbench -C -n -p 11002 -c 10 -T 30 -f test.sql test transaction type: Custom query scaling factor: 1 query mode: simple number of clients: 10 number of threads: 1 duration: 30 s number of transactions actually processed: 2883 latency average: 104.058 ms tps = 95.799114 (including connections establishing) tps = 124.487149 (excluding connections establishing) Interesting thing is, the number from "excluding connections establishing". 124.487149 tps means 0.008032 seconds per transaction. Since the query executes pg_sleep(0.1), I think the number should be equal to or greater than 0.1. Maybe a tolerance, but 20% of error seems to be too high for me. Note that if "-C" does not present, the TPS number seems to be sane. $ pgbench -n -p 11002 -c 10 -T 30 -f test.sql test transaction type: Custom query scaling factor: 1 query mode: simple number of clients: 10 number of threads: 1 duration: 30 s number of transactions actually processed: 2970 latency average: 101.010 ms tps = 98.692514 (including connections establishing) tps = 98.747053 (excluding connections establishing) -- Tatsuo Ishii SRA OSS, Inc. Japan English: http://www.sraoss.co.jp/index_en.php Japanese:http://www.sraoss.co.jp -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers