* Noah Misch (n...@leadboat.com) wrote:
> In particular, implementing a GPU-based strcoll() for bttextcmp
> sounds like quite a project in its own right.
It also wouldn't likely be helpful... To be able to use a GPU
effectively, last I looked, you need to be able to move a large
chunk of data to
On Fri, May 24, 2013 at 01:13:21PM -0500, Jim Nasby wrote:
> On 5/13/13 9:28 AM, Noah Misch wrote:
>> It would be great if one client session could take advantage of multiple CPU
>> cores. EnterpriseDB wishes to start the trek into this problem space for 9.4
>> by implementing parallel internal (i
Let me introduce one thing we discussed in the developer meeting at
Ottawa. We got a consensus that pluggable exec-node may be useful to
replace a part of exec-node tree with an alternative one being
implemented by extensions; which will allow to run something like
"GpuSort" instead of existing Sor
> Have you considered GPU-based sorting? I know there's been discussion
in the past.
If you use OpenCL, then you can use a CPU driver if there is no GPU, and
that can allow you to leverage all the CPU cores without having to do
the multi-thread stuff in the backend.
While the compilation of
On 5/13/13 9:28 AM, Noah Misch wrote:
It would be great if one client session could take advantage of multiple CPU
cores. EnterpriseDB wishes to start the trek into this problem space for 9.4
by implementing parallel internal (i.e. not spilling to disk) sort. This
touches on a notable subset of
On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 11:11 AM, Noah Misch wrote:
> On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 08:12:34AM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
> > The concept of clause parallelism for backend worker is close to the
> > concept of clause shippability introduced in Postgres-XC. In the case of
> > XC, the equivalent of th
On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 08:49:00PM +0200, Andres Freund wrote:
> On 2013-05-13 10:28:59 -0400, Noah Misch wrote:
> > Each worker needs to make SnapshotNow visibility decisions coherent with the
> > master. For sorting, this allows us to look up comparison functions, even
> > when the current trans
On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 3:04 PM, Noah Misch wrote:
> On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 12:15:24PM -0300, Claudio Freire wrote:
>> You know what would be a low-hanging fruit that I've been thinking
>> would benefit many of my own queries?
>>
>> "Parallel" sequential scan nodes. Even if there's no real parall
On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 11:32 AM, Peter Geoghegan wrote:
> I think that this effort could justify itself independently of any
> attempt to introduce parallelism to in-memory sorting. I abandoned a
> patch to introduce timsort to Postgres, because I knew that there was
> no principled way to reap t
On 2013-05-13 10:28:59 -0400, Noah Misch wrote:
> Each worker needs to make SnapshotNow visibility decisions coherent with the
> master. For sorting, this allows us to look up comparison functions, even
> when the current transaction created or modified those functions. This will
> also be an ess
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 7:28 AM, Noah Misch wrote:
> We should decide whether to actually sort in parallel based on the comparator
> cost and the data size. The system currently has no information on comparator
> cost: bt*cmp (and indeed almost all built-in functions) all have procost=1,
> but bt
On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 12:26:52PM +0530, Amit Kapila wrote:
> On Monday, May 13, 2013 7:59 PM Noah Misch wrote:
> > We can allocate a small amount of permanent shared memory for
> > coordination
> > among a group of processes, but sorting will benefit from a region as
> > large as
> > maintenance_
On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 08:12:34AM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
> The concept of clause parallelism for backend worker is close to the
> concept of clause shippability introduced in Postgres-XC. In the case of
> XC, the equivalent of the master backend is a backend located on a node
> called Coord
On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 12:15:24PM -0300, Claudio Freire wrote:
> You know what would be a low-hanging fruit that I've been thinking
> would benefit many of my own queries?
>
> "Parallel" sequential scan nodes. Even if there's no real parallelism
> involved, when a query has to scan the same table
On Monday, May 13, 2013 7:59 PM Noah Misch wrote:
> It would be great if one client session could take advantage of
> multiple CPU
> cores. EnterpriseDB wishes to start the trek into this problem space
> for 9.4
> by implementing parallel internal (i.e. not spilling to disk) sort.
> This
> touches
On 05/15/2013 07:30 AM, Tom Lane wrote:
> Hannu Krosing writes:
>> Has anybody looked into making syscache MVCC compliant ?
> This is the wrong statement of the question.
>
> The right statement is "how would you like backend A to be updating
> table T in compliance with a view of table T's schema
Hannu Krosing writes:
> Has anybody looked into making syscache MVCC compliant ?
This is the wrong statement of the question.
The right statement is "how would you like backend A to be updating
table T in compliance with a view of table T's schema that is obsolete
because of backend B's already-
On 05/13/2013 07:10 PM, Robert Haas wrote:
> On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 10:57 AM, Tom Lane wrote:
>> This approach seems to me to be likely to guarantee that the startup
>> overhead for any parallel sort is so large that only fantastically
>> enormous sorts will come out ahead.
>>
>> I think you need
On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 11:59 PM, Noah Misch wrote:
> On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 01:51:42PM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
> > On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 11:28 PM, Noah Misch wrote:
> >
> > > * Identifying Parallel-Compatible Functions
> > >
> > > Not all functions can reasonably run on a worker backen
On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 11:50 AM, Noah Misch wrote:
> On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 09:52:43PM +0200, Kohei KaiGai wrote:
>> 2013/5/13 Noah Misch
>> > The choice of whether to parallelize can probably be made a manner similar
>> > to
>> > the choice to do an external sort: the planner guesses the outco
On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 01:51:42PM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote:
> On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 11:28 PM, Noah Misch wrote:
>
> > * Identifying Parallel-Compatible Functions
> >
> > Not all functions can reasonably run on a worker backend. We should not
> > presume that a VOLATILE function can tolera
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 09:52:43PM +0200, Kohei KaiGai wrote:
> 2013/5/13 Noah Misch
> > The choice of whether to parallelize can probably be made a manner similar
> > to
> > the choice to do an external sort: the planner guesses the outcome for
> > costing
> > purposes, but the actual decision is
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 07:55:16PM +0100, Simon Riggs wrote:
> On 13 May 2013 15:28, Noah Misch wrote:
>
> > The heavyweight locking mechanism will need to be aware of the association
> > between the master and its workers.
>
> Not sure I can see why that would be true.
>
> ISTM that the worker
On Tue, May 14, 2013 at 12:51 AM, Michael Paquier
wrote:
>> I'm not sure what the specific answer here should look like. Simply
>> having a
>> CREATE FUNCTION ... PARALLEL_IS_FINE flag is not entirely satisfying,
>> because
>> the rules are liable to loosen over time.
>
> Having a flag would be e
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 11:28 PM, Noah Misch wrote:
> * Identifying Parallel-Compatible Functions
>
> Not all functions can reasonably run on a worker backend. We should not
> presume that a VOLATILE function can tolerate the unstable execution order
> imposed by parallelism, though a function l
On 13 May 2013 15:57, Tom Lane wrote:
> I think you need to think in terms of restricting the problem space
+1
> One obvious suggestion is to forbid the workers from
> doing any database access of their own at all --- the parent would
> have to do any required catalog lookups for sort functions
2013/5/13 Noah Misch
> * Planner & Similar Issues
>
> We should decide whether to actually sort in parallel based on the
> comparator
> cost and the data size. The system currently has no information on
> comparator
> cost: bt*cmp (and indeed almost all built-in functions) all have procost=1,
>
On 13 May 2013 15:28, Noah Misch wrote:
> The heavyweight locking mechanism will need to be aware of the association
> between the master and its workers.
Not sure I can see why that would be true.
ISTM that the workers need to be restricted in various ways from a
full-functioned master. If the
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 04:39:01PM +0200, Andres Freund wrote:
> On 2013-05-13 10:28:59 -0400, Noah Misch wrote:
> > Each worker needs to make SnapshotNow visibility decisions coherent with the
> > master. For sorting, this allows us to look up comparison functions, even
> > when the current trans
On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 10:57 AM, Tom Lane wrote:
> This approach seems to me to be likely to guarantee that the startup
> overhead for any parallel sort is so large that only fantastically
> enormous sorts will come out ahead.
>
> I think you need to think in terms of restricting the problem spac
On 2013-05-13 10:57:39 -0400, Tom Lane wrote:
> Noah Misch writes:
> > Each worker needs to make SnapshotNow visibility decisions coherent with the
> > master. For sorting, this allows us to look up comparison functions, even
> > when the current transaction created or modified those functions.
Noah Misch writes:
> Each worker needs to make SnapshotNow visibility decisions coherent with the
> master. For sorting, this allows us to look up comparison functions, even
> when the current transaction created or modified those functions. This will
> also be an essential building block for an
Hi,
Interesting! Need to think about most, but one piece immediately came to
mind:
On 2013-05-13 10:28:59 -0400, Noah Misch wrote:
> Each worker needs to make SnapshotNow visibility decisions coherent with the
> master. For sorting, this allows us to look up comparison functions, even
> when the
It would be great if one client session could take advantage of multiple CPU
cores. EnterpriseDB wishes to start the trek into this problem space for 9.4
by implementing parallel internal (i.e. not spilling to disk) sort. This
touches on a notable subset of the infrastructure components we'll nee
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