Hi,

I’m writing a new web app, and I’ve been experimenting with some async DB 
access libraries [1]. I also see some discussion online about a future Java 
standard to replace or supplement JDBC with an async API.

While I understand the benefits of async in some situations, it seems to me 
that these libraries are not going to give much performance benefit, given the 
architecture of a PostgreSQL server. (Nothing against PG; probably most RDBMSs 
are like this.)

I wonder if anyone else has looked at this and agrees, or not. ?

A client library with an async-style API may allow 100,000s of concurrent 
“operations”, but since the PG server itself doesn’t handle connections on that 
scale (and has no plans to, I assume?), the client library is really 
maintaining a queue of operations waiting for a connection pool. Maybe there is 
some performance benefit there, but the most important point - to free up the 
front end to handle many HTTP connections - can also happen by combining an 
operation queue with a synchronous API. 

Rob


[1]: Mentioned here: https://github.com/pgjdbc/pgadba/issues/17

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