On Nov 22, 2007 12:49 AM, Greg Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hard drives deliver a higher transfer rate at their inner > portions, typically the start of the disk from the operating system's > perspective.
It could have been a good point if it was seq scans of large tables. It's only index scans on small tables which return only a couple of rows. They all fit in cache without any problem. For the last test I exposed in a previous email, the table is just 5480 rows and here are the sizes of the table and the index used: cityvox=> select pg_size_pretty(pg_relation_size('vilsitelang')); pg_size_pretty ---------------- 232 kB (1 row) cityvox=> select pg_size_pretty(pg_relation_size('pk_vilsitelang')); pg_size_pretty ---------------- 120 kB (1 row) > Not saying this is responsible for your results, just that benchmarking is > hard and there may be somthing other than what you think responsible for a > difference of this size. Sure. That's why I wanted other people advice :). I'm not saying my benchmark is perfectly relevant: I made it excessively simple on purpose. I just see a general slow down which is quite consistent accross all the tests I did (with pgbench or the application) and I'd really like to know if it's just my case on this particular box or something more general. Let's call it a call to share benchmark results for 8.3 :). We're not that far from the release and I didn't see a lot of benchmarks results around. I just wanted to add that I know that there is a lot of other things which may be faster with 8.3. What bothers me is that I don't think the other improvements will help that much this database in particular and this is by far the most critical database we're hosting here. -- Guillaume ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: You can help support the PostgreSQL project by donating at http://www.postgresql.org/about/donate