On Thu, 19 Jul 2007, Josh Berkus wrote:

It's a TPCC-like workload, so heavy single-row updates, and the updates/inserts are what's being measured.

There's so much going on with a TPC-C kind of workload. Has anyone ever looked into quantifying scaling for more fundamental operations? There are so many places a complicated workload could get caught up that starting there is hard. I've found it's helpful to see the breaking points for simpler operations, then compare how things change as each new transaction element is introduced.

As an example, take a look at the MySQL SysBench tool:
http://sysbench.sourceforge.net/docs/

Specifically their "oltp" tests. Note how you can get a handle on how simple selects scale, then simple inserts, then updates, and so on. The only thing I've thought of they missed is testing a trivial operation that doesn't even touch the buffer cache ('SELECT 1'?) that would let you quantify just general connection scaling issues.

It seems to me that you could narrow the list of possible causes here much more quickly if you had a good handle on the upper concurrency of lower-level operations.

[Note: it's possible to run SysBench against a PG database, but the code is very immature. Last time I tried there were plenty of crashes and there seemed to be some transaction wrapping issues that caused deadlocks with some tests.]

--
* Greg Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.gregsmith.com Baltimore, MD

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