From: | Ron Mayer <rm_pg(at)cheapcomplexdevices(dot)com> |
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To: | Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us> |
Subject: | Re: More thoughts about planner's cost estimates |
Date: | 2006-06-07 00:32:03 |
Message-ID: | 44861E83.9070403@cheapcomplexdevices.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-hackers |
Tom Lane wrote:
>
> One objection to this is that after moving "off the gold standard" of
> 1.0 = one page fetch, there is no longer any clear meaning to the
> cost estimate units; you're faced with the fact that they're just an
> arbitrary scale. I'm not sure that's such a bad thing, though.
It seems to me the appropriate gold standard is Time, in microseconds
or milliseconds.
The default postgresql.conf can come with a set of hardcoded
values that reasonably approximate some real-world system; and
if that's documented in the file someone reading it can say
"hey, my CPU's about the same but my disk subsystem is much
faster, so I know in which direction to change things".
And another person may say "ooh, now I know that my 4GHz
machines should have about twice the number here as my 2GHz
box".
For people who *really* care a lot (HW vendors?), they could
eventually make measurements on their systems.
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