Hi Lech,
IMHO, the Slurm user community would benefit the most from your
interesting work on MySQL/MariaDB performance, if your patch could be
made against the current 18.08 and the coming 19.05 releases. This
would ensure that your work is carried forward.
Would you be able to make patches against 18.08 and 19.05? If you
submit the patches to SchedMD, my guess is that they'd be very
interested. A site with a SchedMD support contract (such as our site)
could also submit a bug report including your patch.
/Ole
On 4/2/19 2:56 PM, Lech Nieroda wrote:
That’s probably it.
Sub-queries are known for potential performance issues, so one wonders why the
devs didn’t extract it accordingly and made the code more robust or at least
compatible with RHEL/CentOS 6 rather than including that remark in the release
notes.
Am 02.04.2019 um 07:20 schrieb Chris Samuel <ch...@csamuel.org>:
On Monday, 1 April 2019 7:55:09 AM PDT Lech Nieroda wrote:
Further analysis of the query has shown that the mysql optimizer has choosen
the wrong execution plan. This may depend on the mysql version, ours was
5.1.69.
I suspect this is the issue documented in the release notes for 17.11:
https://github.com/SchedMD/slurm/blob/slurm-17.11/RELEASE_NOTES
NOTE FOR THOSE UPGRADING SLURMDBD: The database conversion process from
SlurmDBD 16.05 or 17.02 may not work properly with MySQL 5.1 (as was the
default version for RHEL 6). Upgrading to a newer version of MariaDB or
MySQL is strongly encouraged to prevent this problem.