On 04.01.2012 13:14, Simon Riggs wrote:
On Tue, Jan 3, 2012 at 11:28 PM, Tom Lane<t...@sss.pgh.pa.us>  wrote:
Jim Nasby<j...@nasby.net>  writes:
On Jan 3, 2012, at 12:11 PM, Simon Riggs wrote:
This could well be related to the fact that DropRelFileNodeBuffers()
does a scan of shared_buffers, which is an O(N) approach no matter the
size of the index.

Couldn't we just leave the buffers alone? Once an index is dropped and that's 
pushed out through the catalog then nothing should be trying to access them and 
they'll eventually just get aged out.

No, we can't, because if they're still dirty then the bgwriter would
first try to write them to the no-longer-existing storage file.  It's
important that we kill the buffers immediately during relation drop.

I'm still thinking that it might be sufficient to mark the buffers
invalid and let the clock sweep find them, thereby eliminating the need
for a freelist.

My patch puts things on the freelist only when it is free to do so.
Not having a freelist at all is probably a simpler way of avoiding the
lock contention, so I'll happily back that suggestion instead. Patch
attached, previous patch revoked.

So, you're proposing that we remove freelist altogether? Sounds reasonable, but that needs to be performance tested somehow. I'm not sure what exactly the test should look like, but it probably should involve an OLTP workload, and large tables being created, populated to fill the cache with pages from the table, and dropped, while the OLTP workload is running. I'd imagine that the worst case scenario looks something like that.

Removing the freelist should speed up the drop, but the question is how costly are the extra clock sweeps that the backends have to do.

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

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