On Wed, Jun 27, 2001 at 06:58:18PM -0400, Bruce Momjian wrote:
: My guess on this one is that Solaris is slower for PostgreSQL because
: process switching is _much_ heavier on Solaris than other OS's.  This is
: because of the way they implemented processes in SVr4.  They got quite
: heavy, almost requiring kernel threads so you weren't switching
: processes all the time.   
: 
: In a sense threads were a solution to a process bloating problem. 
: Linux/BSD have much lighter processes and hence work better for
: PostgreSQL.  Again, this is only a guess.
: 
: MySQL does more stuff with threads while PostgreSQL switches process
: because each backend is a process.

Does more stuff with threads?  It does all stuff with threads.  Your
guess was our guess, which is why we tried shoving the thing over to a
Linux box.  Now if I only I could figure out why kernel CPU usage keeps
going up incrementally over time (went from roughly a 5% average to a
16% average in two days) the more we run the system.  All signs are
pointing to postgres.

VACUUM ANALYZE-ing the tables used to reduce it back down, but now, it
doesn't appear to be as effective (might go from 16% back down to
13%).  Anyone know what causes that, and better yet, anyone know how to
fix it?  We see similar behavior under Solaris.

* Philip Molter
* DataFoundry.net
* http://www.datafoundry.net/
* [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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