RE: [GENERAL] Performance - Mailing list pgsql-general
From | Jason |
---|---|
Subject | RE: [GENERAL] Performance |
Date | |
Msg-id | 908DAF4A5E00D211B54C00400543592D276CBF@ariel.telserco.com Whole thread Raw |
List | pgsql-general |
Database is vacuumed nightly. Matter of fact, it was vacuumed just prior to the start of the update! -Jason. -----Original Message----- From: K.T. [mailto:kanet@calmarconsulting.com] Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 1999 2:35 PM To: Statistical Solutions; pgsql-general@postgreSQL.org Subject: Re: [GENERAL] Performance 60 secs vs 10 minutes tho! I don't think that can be explained away with OS speed differences unless you have the Solaris installation horribly mangled. It sounds like the Sparc's test was run on an existing database thats been in use...perhaps the indexes need to be cleaned up a little with a vacuum? -----Original Message----- From: Statistical Solutions <statsol@statsol.com> To: pgsql-general@postgreSQL.org <pgsql-general@postgreSQL.org> Date: Tuesday, March 30, 1999 9:17 AM Subject: Re: [GENERAL] Performance >On Tue, 30 Mar 1999, The Hermit Hacker wrote: >[snip] >> Using the rc5 client as a 'benchmark' (what else has programmers working >> hard to optimize their code to get the best numbers on it?), we found that >> when comparing a Dual-PII 450 against an Sparc E450/400Mhz, the E450 came >> in at ~30% less powerful then the Dual-PII ... >> >> The other thing to consider is that you are comparing two differences, not >> just one. Different CPUs and different operating systems. Solaris isn't >> nicknamed 'slowaris' for nothing :) Its a bloated OS, albeit stable... > >The original poster noted using Solaris 2.5.1 -- been there, done that, it >certainly can be slow. A long time ago, I contacted Sun about this. They >acknowledged a problem with the dynamic library loading routines. I have >a Dual Sparc 125/512 running Solaris 2.6 and a dual pentium-100 running >2.5.1. I'll test some to see if this might be 2.5 v. 2.6 OS differences, >although there is stil the underlying hardware issue. > >The second point however, is clock speeds. Two 167 CPUs <> One 333 CPU. > >The third is the SPARC chip's cache versus the Intel chip's cache. I know >SUN and Ross were making chips with as little as 128 cache, and the SPEC >marks for the 128 v. 256 v 512 v 1024 cache are phenomenal. So just out >of curiousity, what's the cache size on the SPARC and Intel chips >respectively? > >> On Tue, 30 Mar 1999, Jason wrote: >> >> > Looking for a little reasoning behind our performance difference on 2 >> > different platforms. We have been running postgres on our sparcs, and >> > have come to rely on the dB quite heavily. We have dedicated a box to >> > doing nothing but our postgres work. Here is what we have: >> > >> > Dual Sparc 167 >> > 512 MB RAM >> > Solaris 2.5.1 >> > >> > Performance seemed reasonable to us, until we ran the same database and >> > queries on the following machine: >> > >> > Intel Celeron 333 >> > 128 MB RAM >> > Red Hat Linux 5.2 >> > >> > We have a passwd style database with 65,000 rows. We updated 20,000 of >> > them with a SQL update command, setting a single integer field to a >> > value. Both boxes where indexed the same, and had identical data. The >> > Sparc took near 10 minutes to complete, while the Intel took ~30 >> > seconds. This is just one case, but many very similar tests had the >> > same results. >> >
pgsql-general by date: