On 25 Mar, Manfred Spraul wrote: > Tom Lane wrote: > >>[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: >> >> >>>I could certainly do some testing if you want to see how DBT-2 does. >>>Just tell me what to do. ;) >>> >>> >> >>Just do some runs that are identical except for the wal_sync_method >>setting. Note that this should not have any impact on SELECT >>performance, only insert/update/delete performance. >> >> > I've made a test run that compares fsync and fdatasync: The performance > was identical: > - with fdatasync: > > http://khack.osdl.org/stp/290607/ > > - with fsync: > http://khack.osdl.org/stp/290483/ > > I don't understand why. Mark - is there a battery backed write cache in > the raid controller, or something similar that might skew the results? > The test generates quite a lot of wal traffic - around 1.5 MB/sec. > Perhaps the writes are so large that the added overhead of syncing the > inode is not noticable? > Is the pg_xlog directory on a seperate drive? > > Btw, it's possible to request such tests through the web-interface, see > http://www.osdl.org/lab_activities/kernel_testing/stp/script_param.html
We have 2 Adaptec 2200s controllers, without the battery backed add-on, connected to four 10-disk arrays in those systems. I can't think of anything off hand that would skew the results. The pg_xlog directory is not on a separate drive. I haven't found the best way to lay out of the drives on those systems yet, so I just have everything on a 28 drive lvm2 volume. Mark ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org