Alvaro Herrera <[email protected]> writes:
> Marko Tiikkaja wrote:
>> On the test server I'm running on, it doesn't look quite as bad as the
>> profiles we had in production, but s_lock is still the worst offender in the
>> profiles, called from:
>>
>> - 80.33% LWLockAcquire
>> + 48.34% asyncQueueReadAllNotifications
>> + 23.09% SIGetDataEntries
>> + 16.92% SimpleLruReadPage_ReadOnly
>> + 10.21% TransactionIdIsInProgress
>> + 1.27% asyncQueueAdvanceTail
>>
>> which roughly looks like what I recall from our actual production profiles.
> So the problem is in the bad scalability of LWLock, not in async.c itself?
> In master, the spinlock there has been replaced with atomics; does that branch
> work better?
FWIW, I can't get results anything like this. With 50 notifiers and 50
listeners, I only see LWLockAcquire eating about 6% of the system-wide
runtime:
- 6.23% 0.64% 11850 postmaster postgres
[.] LWLockAcquire
- LWLockAcquire
+ 33.16% asyncQueueReadAllNotifications
+ 20.76% SimpleLruReadPage_ReadOnly
+ 18.02% TransactionIdIsInProgress
+ 8.67% VirtualXactLockTableInsert
+ 3.98% ProcArrayEndTransaction
+ 3.03% VirtualXactLockTableCleanup
+ 1.77% PreCommit_Notify
+ 1.68% ProcessCompletedNotifies
+ 1.62% asyncQueueAdvanceTail
+ 1.28% ProcessNotifyInterrupt
+ 1.04% StartTransaction
+ 1.00% LockAcquireExtended
+ 0.96% ProcSleep
+ 0.81% LockReleaseAll
+ 0.69% TransactionIdSetPageStatus
+ 0.54% GetNewTransactionId
There isn't any really sore-thumb place that we might fix. Interestingly,
a big chunk of the runtime is getting eaten by the kernel, breaking down
more or less like this:
- 36.52% 0.05% 836 postmaster [kernel.kallsyms]
[k] system_call_fastpath
- system_call_fastpath
+ 37.47% __GI___kill
+ 27.26% __poll
+ 9.55% __write_nocancel
+ 8.87% __GI___semop
+ 7.31% __read_nocancel
+ 5.14% __libc_recv
+ 3.77% __libc_send
+ 0.53% __GI___setitimer
The kill() calls are evidently from async.c's SignalBackends() while most
of the other kernel activity is connected to client/server I/O.
Since the clients aren't doing any actual database work, just notify and
receive notifies, this doesn't seem like a representative workload.
So I can't get that excited about how asyncQueueReadAllNotifications and
subsidiary TransactionIdIsInProgress tests cause a large fraction of the
LWLock acquisitions --- that's only true because nothing else very useful
is happening.
BTW, this is HEAD, but I tried 9.4 quickly and didn't really see anything
much different. Not sure why the discrepancy with Marko's results.
regards, tom lane
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