The way my rewritten FSM works at the moment is that pages are handed out of the FSM in random order, to spread the load of multiple backends to different pages. That's good for spreading the load, but it occurred to me while observing a test case that inserts a lot of rows to an almost empty table with plenty of free space, that that sucks for the case of a single backend populating a table. Currently, FSM will hand out pages in sequential order, so from OS point of view we're reading and writing the pages sequentially. If the pages are handed out in random order, we'll do random I/O instead.

Fortunately there's an easy fix for that. If we optimize RecordAndGetPageWithFreeSpace so that it will always return the next page if it has enough space, we'll be doing sequential I/O again. That's trivial as long as the next heap page is on the same FSM page, and probably not too hard even if it's not. If we limit this optimization to within the same FSM page, we'll effectively be filling fully a 32MB stripes

Thoughts?

I'm running more tests, and there's more issues that need discussion, but I'll start separate threads for each. I'll also post an updated patch separately.

--
  Heikki Linnakangas
  EnterpriseDB   http://www.enterprisedb.com

--
Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org)
To make changes to your subscription:
http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers

Reply via email to