"Kevin Grittner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Any tests which focus just on throughput don't address the problems which > caused us so much grief.
This is a good point: a steady-state load is either going to be in the regime where you're not write-bottlenecked, or the one where you are; and either way the bgwriter isn't going to look like it helps much. The real use of the bgwriter, perhaps, is to smooth out a varying load so that you don't get pushed into the write-bottlenecked mode during spikes. We've already had to rethink the details of how we made that happen with respect to preventing checkpoints from causing I/O spikes. Maybe LRU buffer flushes need a rethink too. Right at the moment I'm still comfortable with what Greg is doing, but there's an argument here for a more aggressive scaling factor on number-of-buffers-to-write than he thinks. Still, as long as we have a GUC variable in there, tuning should be possible. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match