> 9.2 + DW patch
> ---
> FPW off FPW on DW on/FPW off
> CK on CK on CK on
> one disk: 11078 10394 3296 [1G shared_buffers, 8G RAM]
> sep log disk: 13605 12015 3412
>
> one disk: 7731 66
On 01/17/2012 03:47 PM, Kevin Grittner wrote:
I'm very curious about what impact DW would have on big servers with
write-back cache that becomes saturated, like in Greg Smith's post
here...
My guess is that a percentage of the dbt-2 run results posted here are
hitting that sort of problem. We
Dan Scales wrote:
> The second set of numbers is for a hard disk with write cache
> turned off, closer to internal hard disks of servers (people were
> quite interested in that result). These runs are for 50-warehouse
> 8-processor DBT2 60-minute run, with checkpoints every 5 minutes.
> The RA
py to hear all comments/suggestions. Thanks,
Dan
- Original Message -
From: "Dan Scales"
To: "Heikki Linnakangas"
Cc: "PG Hackers" , jks...@gmail.com, "David
Fetter"
Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2012 1:25:21 PM
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] [WIP] Do
On Thu, Jan 12, 2012 at 12:09 AM, Tom Lane wrote:
> Simon Riggs writes:
>> On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 11:07 PM, Josh Berkus wrote:
>>> On 1/11/12 1:25 PM, Dan Scales wrote:
And just wanted to reiterate one other benefit of double writes -- it
greatly reduces the size of the WAL logs.
>
>
On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 7:09 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
> The question is how you prevent torn pages when a slave server crashes
> during replay. Right now, the presence of FPIs in the WAL stream,
> together with the requirement that replay restart from a checkpoint,
> is sufficient to guarantee that a
Simon Riggs writes:
> On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 11:07 PM, Josh Berkus wrote:
>> On 1/11/12 1:25 PM, Dan Scales wrote:
>>> And just wanted to reiterate one other benefit of double writes -- it
>>> greatly reduces the size of the WAL logs.
>> Even if you're replicating?
> Yes, but it will increase
On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 11:07 PM, Josh Berkus wrote:
> On 1/11/12 1:25 PM, Dan Scales wrote:
>> And just wanted to reiterate one other benefit of double writes -- it
>> greatly reduces the size of the WAL logs.
>
> Even if you're replicating?
Yes, but it will increase random I/O on the standby w
On 1/11/12 1:25 PM, Dan Scales wrote:
> And just wanted to reiterate one other benefit of double writes -- it greatly
> reduces the size of the WAL logs.
Even if you're replicating?
--
Josh Berkus
PostgreSQL Experts Inc.
http://pgexperts.com
--
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hacke
...@gmail.com
Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2012 4:13:01 AM
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] [WIP] Double-write with Fast Checksums
On 10.01.2012 23:43, David Fetter wrote:
> Please find attached a new revision of the double-write patch. While
> this one still uses the checksums from VMware, it'
On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 9:47 AM, Aidan Van Dyk wrote:
> It does this by moving the FPW/IO penalty from the commit time of a
> backend dirtying the buffer first, to the eviction time of a backend
> evicting a dirty buffer. And if you're lucky enough that the
> background writer is the only one wri
On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 7:13 AM, Heikki Linnakangas
wrote:
> At the moment, double-writes are done in one batch, fsyncing the
> double-write area first and the data files immediately after that. That's
> probably beneficial if you have a BBU, and/or a fairly large shared_buffers
> setting, so tha
On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 12:13 PM, Heikki Linnakangas
wrote:
> At the moment, double-writes are done in one batch, fsyncing the
> double-write area first and the data files immediately after that. That's
> probably beneficial if you have a BBU, and/or a fairly large shared_buffers
> setting, so th
On 10.01.2012 23:43, David Fetter wrote:
Please find attached a new revision of the double-write patch. While
this one still uses the checksums from VMware, it's been
forward-ported to 9.2.
I'd like to hold off on merging Simon's checksum patch into this one
for now because there may be some in
14 matches
Mail list logo