Re: Optimal checkpoint_setting - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Dennis
Subject Re: Optimal checkpoint_setting
Date
Msg-id 4DA4C739-8CEB-446C-BCD8-B6E83EB639BB@visi.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: Optimal checkpoint_setting  (Jeff Janes <jeff.janes@gmail.com>)
Responses Re: Optimal checkpoint_setting  (John R Pierce <pierce@hogranch.com>)
List pgsql-general
Hi, a little off the general topic but I am just wondering if the “tar -cf - pgdata | wc -c” trick can be used as general trick to pre-warm the cache?

Thanks.

On Oct 9, 2014, at 10:55 AM, Jeff Janes <jeff.janes@gmail.com> wrote:

On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 3:52 AM, pinker <pinker@onet.eu> wrote:
Hello All,
I have a brand new machine to tune:
x3750 M4, 4xE5-4640v2 2.2GHz; 512GBRAM (32x16GB), 4x300GB
SAS + SSD (Easy Tier) in RAID 10

What's particularly important now is to choose optimal configuration for
write operations. We have discussion about checkpoint_segments and
checkpoint_timeout parameters. Test, which was based on pg_replay, has shown
that the biggest amount of data is written when checkpoint_segments are set
to 10 000 and checkpoint_timeout to 30 min, but I'm worrying about amount of
time needed for crash recovery.

Since you already have pg_replay running, kill -9 some backend (my favorite victim is the bgwriter) during the middle of pg_replay, and see how long it takes to recover.
 
You might want to try it with and without clobbering the FS cache, or simply rebooting the whole machine, depending on what kind of crash you think is more likely.

Recovering into a cold cache can be painfully slow.  If your database mostly fits in memory, you can speed it up by using something (like "tar -cf - pgdata | wc -c" to) read the entire pg data directory in sequential fashion and hopefully cache it. If you find recovery too slow, you might want to try to this trick (and put it in your init scripts) rather than lowering checkpoint_segments.

Cheers,

Jeff


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