I have questions about how to improve the write performance of PostgreSQL for 
logging data from a real-time simulation. We found that MySQL 4.1.3 could log 
about 1480 objects/second using MyISAM tables or about 1225 objects/second 
using InnoDB tables, but PostgreSQL 8.0.3 could log only about 540 
objects/second. (test system: quad-Itanium2, 8GB memory, SCSI RAID, GigE 
connection from simulation server, nothing running except system processes and 
database system under test)

We also found that we could improve MySQL performance significantly using MySQL's 
"INSERT" command extension allowing multiple value-list tuples in a single 
command; the rate for MyISAM tables improved to about 2600 objects/second. PostgreSQL 
doesn't support that language extension. Using the COPY command instead of INSERT might 
help, but since rows are being generated on the fly, I don't see how to use COPY without 
running a separate process that reads rows from the application and uses COPY to write to 
the database. The application currently has two processes: the simulation and a data 
collector that reads events from the sim (queued in shared memory) and writes them as 
rows to the database, buffering as needed to avoid lost data during periods of high 
activity. To use COPY I think we would have to split our data collector into two 
processes communicating via a pipe.

Query performance is not an issue: we found that when suitable indexes are 
added PostgreSQL is fast enough on the kinds of queries our users make. The 
crux is writing rows to the database fast enough to keep up with the simulation.

Are there general guidelines for tuning the PostgreSQL server for this kind of 
application? The suggestions I've found include disabling fsync (done), 
increasing the value of wal_buffers, and moving the WAL to a different disk, 
but these aren't likely to produce the 3x improvement that we need. On the 
client side I've found only two suggestions: disable autocommit and use COPY 
instead of INSERT. I think I've effectively disabled autocommit by batching up 
to several hundred INSERT commands in each PQexec() call, and it isn’t clear 
that COPY is worth the effort in our application.

Thanks.


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