odd variances in count(*) times - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From Merlin Moncure
Subject odd variances in count(*) times
Date
Msg-id b42b73150610091117n29e8d9d5yed07abe8a228593e@mail.gmail.com
Whole thread Raw
Responses Re: odd variances in count(*) times  (Stephen Frost <sfrost@snowman.net>)
List pgsql-performance
I have two systems running 8.2beta1 getting strange difference of
results in count(*).  Query that illistrates the difference is
count(*).  this is a synthetic test i use to measure a sytems's cpu
performance.

System A:
2.2 ghz p4 northwood, HT
win xp
vanilla sata (1 disk)

System B:
amd 64 3700+
linux cent/os 4.4 32 bit
4 raptors, raid 5, 3ware

explain analyze select 5000!;
A: 2.4 seconds
B: 1.8 seconds

explain analyze select count(*) from generate_series(1,500000);
A: 0.85 seconds
B: 4.94 seconds

Both systems have a freshly minted database.  By all resepcts I would
expect B to outperform A on most cpu bound tests with a faster
processor and linux kernel.  memory is not an issue here, varying the
size of the count(*) does not effect the results, A is always 5x
faster than B.  the only two variables i see are cpu and o/s.

Also tested on pg 8.1, results are same except pg 8.2 is about 10%
faster on both systems for count(*).  (yay!) :-)

anybody think of anything obvious? should i profile? (windows mingw
profiling sucks)

merlin

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