From: | Gaetano Mendola <mendola(at)gmail(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | "pgsql-performance(at)postgresql(dot)org" <pgsql-performance(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
Subject: | Re: shared_buffers performance |
Date: | 2008-04-15 15:08:02 |
Message-ID: | 4804C4D2.5020603@gmail.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-performance |
Gaetano Mendola wrote:
> Hi all,
> I started to do some performance tests (using pgbench) in order to
> estimate the DRBD impact on our servers, my plan was to perform some
> benchmarks without DRBD in order to compare the same benchmark with
> DRBD.
> I didn't perform yet the benchmark with DRBD and I'm already facing
> something I can not explain (I performed at the moment only reads test).
>
> I'm using postgres 8.2.3 on Red Hat compiled with GCC 3.4.6.
>
> I'm using pgbench with scaling factor with a range [1:500], my server
> has 4 cores so I'm trying with 16 client and 4000 transaction per
> client: pgbench -t 4000 -c 16 -S db_perf. I did 3 session using 3 different
> values of shared_buffers: 64MB, 256MB, 512MB and my server has 2GB.
>
> The following graph reports the results:
>
> http://img84.imageshack.us/my.php?image=totalid7.png
>
> as you can see using 64MB as value for shared_buffers I'm obtaining better
> results. Is this something expected or I'm looking in the wrong direction?
> I'm going to perform same tests without using the -S option in pgbench but
> being a time expensive operation I would like to ear your opinion first.
I have complete today the other benchmarks using pgbench in write mode as well,
and the following graph resumes the results:
http://img440.imageshack.us/my.php?image=totalwbn0.png
what I can say here the trend is the opposite seen on the read only mode as
increasing the shared_buffers increases the TPS.
I still didn't upgrade to 8.2.7 as suggested by Greg Smith because I would like
to compare the results obtained till now with the new one (simulations running
while I write) using postgres on a "DRBD partition"; sure as soon the current
tests terminate I will upgrade postgres.
If you have any suggestions on what you would like to see/know, just let me know.
Regards
Gaetano Mendola
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