Bruce Momjian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I have been poking around with our fsync default options to see if I can > improve them. One issue is that we never default to O_SYNC, but default > to O_DSYNC if it exists, which seems strange.
As I recall, that was based on testing on some different platforms. It's not particularly "strange": O_SYNC implies writing at least two places on the disk (file and inode). O_DSYNC or fdatasync should theoretically be the fastest alternatives, O_SYNC and fsync the worst. > Compare fsync before and after write's close: > write, fsync, close 0.000707 > write, close, fsync 0.000808 What does that mean? You can't fsync a closed file. > This shows terrible O_SYNC performance for 2 8k writes, but is faster > for a single 8k write. Strange. I'm not sure I believe these numbers at all... my experience is that getting trustworthy disk I/O numbers is *not* easy. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: don't forget to increase your free space map settings