Stefan,

On 10/30/06 8:57 AM, "Stefan Kaltenbrunner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>> We've found that there is an ultimate bottleneck at about 12-14MB/s despite
>> having sequential write to disk speeds of 100s of MB/s.  I forget what the
>> latest bottleneck was.
> 
> I have personally managed to load a bit less then 400k/s (5 int columns
> no indexes) - on very fast disk hardware - at that point postgresql is
> completely CPU bottlenecked (2,6Ghz Opteron).

400,000 rows/s x 4 bytes/column x 5 columns/row = 8MB/s

> Using multiple processes to load the data will help to scale up to about
>   900k/s (4 processes on 4 cores).

18MB/s?  Have you done this?  I've not seen this much of an improvement
before by using multiple COPY processes to the same table.

Another question: how to measure MB/s - based on the input text file?  On
the DBMS storage size?  We usually consider the input text file in the
calculation of COPY rate.

- Luke



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