Re: Large databases, performance - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From Robert Treat
Subject Re: Large databases, performance
Date
Msg-id 1033662394.21324.59.camel@camel
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Large databases, performance  ("Shridhar Daithankar" <shridhar_daithankar@persistent.co.in>)
Responses Re: Large databases, performance
List pgsql-performance
On Thu, 2002-10-03 at 12:17, Shridhar Daithankar wrote:
> On 3 Oct 2002 at 11:57, Robert Treat wrote:
> May be it's time to rewrite famous myth that postgresql is slow.

That myth has been dis-proven long ago, it just takes awhile for
everyone to catch on ;-)

When properly
> tuned or given enough head room, it's almost as fast as mysql..
>
> > I'm curious, did you happen to run the select tests while also running
> > the insert tests? IIRC the older mysql versions have to lock the table
> > when doing the insert, so select performance goes in the dumper in that
> > scenario, perhaps that's not an issue with 3.23.52?
>
> IMO even if it locks tables that shouldn't affect select performance. It would
> be fun to watch when we insert multiple chunks of data and fire queries
> concurrently. I would be surprised if mysql starts slowing down..
>

Hmm... been awhile since I dug into mysql internals, but IIRC once the
table was locked, you had to wait for the insert to complete so the
table would be unlocked and the select could go through. (maybe this is
a myth that I need to get clued in on)

> > It also seems like the vacuum after each insert is unnecessary, unless
> > your also deleting/updating data behind it. Perhaps just running an
> > ANALYZE on the table would suffice while reducing overhead.
>
> I believe that was vacuum analyze only. But still it takes lot of time. Good
> thing is it's not blocking..
>
> Anyway I don't think such frequent vacuums are going to convince planner to
> choose index scan over sequential scan. I am sure it's already convinced..
>

My thinking was that if your just doing inserts, you need to update the
statistics but don't need to check on unused tuples.

Robert Treat


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