On 04/03/2014 09:01 AM, Thomas Kellerer wrote:
Rob Sargent, 02.04.2014 21:37:
I loaded 37M+ records using jOOQ (batching every 1000 lines) in 12+
hours (800+ records/sec). Then I tried COPY and killed that after
11.25 hours when I realised that I had added on non-unque index on
the name fields after the first load. By that point is was on line
28301887, so ~0.75 done which implies it would have take ~15hours to
complete.
Would the overhead of the index likely explain this decrease in
throughput?
Impatience got the better of me and I killed the second COPY. This
time it had done 54% of the file in 6.75 hours, extrapolating to
roughly 12 hours to do the whole thing.
That matches up with the java speed. Not sure if I should be elated
with jOOQ or disappointed with COPY.
This is not what I see with COPY FROM STDIN
When I load 2million rows using a batch size of 1000 with plain JDBC that takes
about 4 minutes
Loading the same file through Java and COPY FROM STDIN takes about 4 seconds
The table looks like this:
Table "public.products"
Column | Type | Modifiers
-------------------+------------------------+-----------
product_id | integer | not null
ean_code | bigint | not null
product_name | character varying(100) | not null
manufacturer_name | character varying | not null
price | numeric(10,2) | not null
publish_date | date | not null
Indexes:
"products_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (product_id)
"idx_publish_date" btree (publish_date, product_id)
During the load both indexes are present.
Regards
Thomas
Thomas thanks for these numbers.
I have to straighten out my environment, which I admit I was hoping to
avoid. I reset checkpoint_segments to 12 and restarted my server.
I kicked of the COPY at 19:00. That generated a couple of the "too
frequent" statements but 52 "WARNING: pgstat wait timeout" lines during
the next 8 hours starting at 00:37 (5 hours in) 'til finally keeling
over at 03:04 on line 37363768. That's the last line of the input so
obviously I didn't flush my last println properly. I'm beyond getting
embarrassed at this point.
Is turning auto-vacuum off a reasonable way through this?