Thread: Is There A Windows Version of Performance Tuning Documents?

Is There A Windows Version of Performance Tuning Documents?

From
"Lane Van Ingen"
Date:
I have in my possession some performance tuning documents authored by Bruce
Momjian, Josh Berkus, and others. They give good information on utilities to
use (like ipcs, sar, vmstat, etc) to evaluate disk, memory, etc. performance
on Unix-based systems.

Problem is, I have applications running on Windows 2003, and have worked
mostly on Unix before. Was wondering if anyone knows where there might be a
Windows performance document that tells what to use / where to look in
Windows for some of this data. I am thinking that I may not seeing what I
need
in perfmon or the Windows task manager.

Want to answer questions like:
  How much memory is being used for disk buffer cache?
  How to I lock shared memory for PostgreSQL (if possible at all)?
  How to determine if SWAP (esp. page-in) activity is hurting me?
  Does Windows use a 'unified buffer cache' or not?
  How do I determine how much space is required to do most of my sorts in
RAM?



Re: Is There A Windows Version of Performance Tuning Documents?

From
John A Meinel
Date:
Lane Van Ingen wrote:
> I have in my possession some performance tuning documents authored by Bruce
> Momjian, Josh Berkus, and others. They give good information on utilities to
> use (like ipcs, sar, vmstat, etc) to evaluate disk, memory, etc. performance
> on Unix-based systems.
>
> Problem is, I have applications running on Windows 2003, and have worked
> mostly on Unix before. Was wondering if anyone knows where there might be a
> Windows performance document that tells what to use / where to look in
> Windows for some of this data. I am thinking that I may not seeing what I
> need
> in perfmon or the Windows task manager.
>
> Want to answer questions like:
>   How much memory is being used for disk buffer cache?
>   How to I lock shared memory for PostgreSQL (if possible at all)?
>   How to determine if SWAP (esp. page-in) activity is hurting me?
>   Does Windows use a 'unified buffer cache' or not?
>   How do I determine how much space is required to do most of my sorts in
> RAM?
>

I don't know of any specific documentation. I would mention the
TaskManager as the first place I would look (Ctrl+Shift+Esc, or right
click on the task bar).
You can customize the columns that it shows in the process view, so you
can get an idea if something is paging, how much I/O it is using, etc.

I'm sure there are other better tools, but this one is pretty easy to
get to, and shows quite a bit.

John
=:->


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