Re: Optimize partial TOAST decompression - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Tomas Vondra
Subject Re: Optimize partial TOAST decompression
Date
Msg-id 20190930155607.5tnyzksijgm4imbg@development
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Optimize partial TOAST decompression  (Tomas Vondra <tomas.vondra@2ndquadrant.com>)
Responses Re: Optimize partial TOAST decompression
List pgsql-hackers
On Fri, Sep 27, 2019 at 01:00:36AM +0200, Tomas Vondra wrote:
>On Wed, Sep 25, 2019 at 05:38:34PM -0300, Alvaro Herrera wrote:
>>Hello, can you please update this patch?
>>
>
>I'm not the patch author, but I've been looking at the patch recently
>and I have a rebased version at hand - so attached.
>
>FWIW I believe the patch is solid and in good shape, and it got stuck
>after I reported some benchmarks showing somewhat flaky performance. I
>know Binguo Bao was trying to reproduce the benchmark, and I assume the
>silence means he was not successful :-(
>
>On the larger data set the patch however performed very nicely, so maybe
>I just did something stupid while running the smaller one, or maybe it's
>just noise (the queries were just a couple of ms in that test). I do
>plan to rerun the benchmarks and investigate a bit - if I find the patch
>is fine, I'd like to commit it shortly.
>

OK, I was just about to push this after polishing it a bit, but then I
noticed the patch does not address one of the points from Paul' review,
asking for comment explaining the pglz_maximum_compressed_size formula.

I mean this:

    /*
     * Use int64 to prevent overflow during calculation.
     */
    compressed_size = (int32) ((int64) rawsize * 9 + 8) / 8;

I'm not very familiar with pglz internals, but I'm a bit puzzled by
this. My first instinct was to compare it to this:

    #define PGLZ_MAX_OUTPUT(_dlen)    ((_dlen) + 4)

but clearly that's a very different (much simpler) formula. So why
shouldn't pglz_maximum_compressed_size simply use this macro?

Regarding benchmarks - as I mentioned, I've repeated the tests and
everything seems fine. The results from the two usual machines are
available in [1]. There are only very few noise-level regressions and
many very significant speedups.

I have a theory what went wrong in the first run that showed some
regressions - it's possible the machine had CPU power management
enabled. I can't check this retroactively, but it'd explain variability
for short queries, and smooth behavior on longer queries.

[1] https://github.com/tvondra/toast-optimize

regards

-- 
Tomas Vondra                  http://www.2ndQuadrant.com
PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services



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