> DB2:
> Uncommitted Read (UR) mode "Dirty read" isn't the default, or
> the recommended lock level for most apps. I was considering
> Cursor Stability mode (or higher), which is the default
Sorry, they call it "read committed" but actually do cursor stability,
which does keep one lock on the
>> > OTOH DB2 and SQLServer take block level
>> > read locks, so they can do this too, but at major loss of
>concurrency
>> > and threat of deadlock.
>
>Note, that in the usual committed read isolation, they do not need to
>read lock a row ! e.g. Informix only verifies, that it could lock the
>ro
> > OTOH DB2 and SQLServer take block level
> > read locks, so they can do this too, but at major loss of
concurrency
> > and threat of deadlock.
Note, that in the usual committed read isolation, they do not need to
read lock a row ! e.g. Informix only verifies, that it could lock the
row
(tha
"Jim C. Nasby" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> (What would be the profiler to use on FBSD?)
gprof should work fine.
regards, tom lane
---(end of broadcast)---
TIP 6: explain analyze is your friend
On Fri, Nov 25, 2005 at 10:20:11AM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> Qingqing Zhou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I can see your computer is really slow, so my theory is that since it is
> > easy to hold a running-slowly horse than a fast one, so my spinlock on a
> > 2.4G modern machine should takes relati
Thinking more about other systems, ISTM that Oracle can do this, as can
any MVCC based system. OTOH DB2 and SQLServer take block level read
locks, so they can do this too, but at major loss of concurrency and
threat of deadlock. Having said that, *any* system that chose not to do
this would be sev
Simon Riggs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>> ...and for emphasis: this optimization of SeqScans is not possible with
>>> any other database system, so its a big win for PostgreSQL.
> Why is it spin to call it a big win?
I didn't say it wasn't a big win; it was the first part of the sentence
that b
Title: Re: [HACKERS] gprof SELECT COUNT(*) results
Nice job Qingqing and Tom!
The improved executor / agg performance will likely help BI / data warehouse customers a lot. I’ll get some DBT-3 results to substantiate as soon as we can.
- Luke
On 11/26/05 12:13 AM, "Qingqing Zhou&quo
On Sat, 2005-11-26 at 11:53 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> Christopher Kings-Lynne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >> ...and for emphasis: this optimization of SeqScans is not possible with
> >> any other database system, so its a big win for PostgreSQL.
>
> > With any other db system? That's a big call.
Christopher Kings-Lynne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> ...and for emphasis: this optimization of SeqScans is not possible with
>> any other database system, so its a big win for PostgreSQL.
> With any other db system? That's a big call. Why?
One could equally well spin it negatively, as "this o
...and for emphasis: this optimization of SeqScans is not possible with
any other database system, so its a big win for PostgreSQL.
With any other db system? That's a big call. Why? Not even other MVCC
systems?
Chris
---(end of broadcast)---
On Sat, 2005-11-26 at 03:13 -0500, Qingqing Zhou wrote:
> "Tom Lane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> >
> > I plan to take a look at it soon.
> >
>
> "Stand corrected"[Merlin]! In-memory "SELECT COUNT(*)" doubles the
> performance due to my test.
>
> - before -
> 1.56 s
>
> - now -
> 0.72 s
>
...a
"Tom Lane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
>
> I plan to take a look at it soon.
>
"Stand corrected"[Merlin]! In-memory "SELECT COUNT(*)" doubles the
performance due to my test.
- before -
1.56 s
- now -
0.72 s
Regards,
Qingqing
---(end of broadcast)-
On Fri, 25 Nov 2005, Tom Lane wrote:
>
> Is that "modern machine" a Xeon by any chance?
>
$#cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep "model name"
model name : Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 CPU 2.40GHz
I can find a 4way Xeon (but it is shared by many users):
/h/164/zhouqq#cat /proc/cpuinfo |grep "model name"
model
Le Vendredi 25 Novembre 2005 16:20, Tom Lane a écrit :
> Qingqing Zhou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I can see your computer is really slow, so my theory is that since it is
> > easy to hold a running-slowly horse than a fast one, so my spinlock on a
> > 2.4G modern machine should takes relativel
On Fri, 2005-11-25 at 09:54 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> Simon Riggs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > On Thu, 2005-11-24 at 23:48 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> >> Yeah, I was wondering the same. It'd be possible to rewrite the seqscan
> >> stuff so that we do the visibility tests for all the tuples on a giv
Qingqing Zhou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I can see your computer is really slow, so my theory is that since it is
> easy to hold a running-slowly horse than a fast one, so my spinlock on a
> 2.4G modern machine should takes relatively longer time to get effective.
> Just kidding.
Is that "moder
Simon Riggs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thu, 2005-11-24 at 23:48 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
>> Yeah, I was wondering the same. It'd be possible to rewrite the seqscan
>> stuff so that we do the visibility tests for all the tuples on a given
>> page at once, taking the buffer content lock just onc
On Thu, 2005-11-24 at 23:48 -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> > What's more, we can see that for each row, a LWLock pair is invoked. So on
> > a more aggressive thought, can we change it to page level?
>
> Yeah, I was wondering the same. It'd be possible to rewrite the seqscan
> stuff so that we do the v
On Thu, 24 Nov 2005, Tom Lane wrote:
>
> I don't see those costing nearly as much as your results show
> ... perhaps there's something platform-specific at work?
> What I see, down to the 1% level, is
>
I can see your computer is really slow, so my theory is that since it is
easy to hold a runni
On Thu, 24 Nov 2005, Qingqing Zhou wrote:
>
> I may need to write some separate tests to see if this is what we should
> pay for bus lock instruction.
>
Here I come up with a test program to see how spinlock costs:
$/pgsql/src/backend/storage/lmgr#./a.out
Spinlock pair(2648542) duration: 143.13
Qingqing Zhou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Yeah, understood. What I can't understand that in this case why it costs
> so much -- without concurrency, the LWLock code path just invloves
> spinlock_lock/unlock and serveral simple instructions?
I don't see those costing nearly as much as your result
On Thu, 24 Nov 2005, Greg Stark wrote:
>
>
> You executed LWLock 2.6 million times in just under 300ms. If my math is right
> that's about 115 nanoseconds per lock or about 300 cycles on a 2.6Ghz
> processor.
>
> That sounds like a lot but it's about the right order of magnitude. Was this
> on a
Qingqing Zhou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Yeah, understood. What I can't understand that in this case why it costs
> so much -- without concurrency, the LWLock code path just invloves
> spinlock_lock/unlock and serveral simple instructions?
You executed LWLock 2.6 million times in just under 3
On Thu, 24 Nov 2005, Simon Riggs wrote:
>
> Maybe, maybe not. The whole system is designed around high levels of
> concurrent access. If you know for certain you don't ever need that then
> other systems are probably the right choice. Concurrency has a cost and
> a benefit. If you measure the co
On Thu, 2005-11-24 at 13:25 -0500, Qingqing Zhou wrote:
> I did some gprof on a simple "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM test" query on cvs tip.
>
> Linux josh.db 2.4.29-1 #2 Tue Jan 25 17:03:33 EST 2005 i686 unknown
> gcc: 2.96
> gprof: 2.13.90.0.2
> ./configure --without-readline
>
> There are 260k or so r
I did some gprof on a simple "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM test" query on cvs tip.
Linux josh.db 2.4.29-1 #2 Tue Jan 25 17:03:33 EST 2005 i686 unknown
gcc: 2.96
gprof: 2.13.90.0.2
./configure --without-readline
There are 260k or so records in table test(i int), about 1500 pages. I
give a shared_buffers
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