On Sun, May 31, 2015 at 7:53 PM, Yves Dorfsman <y...@zioup.com> wrote:

>> That's the thing, even on an old laptop with a slow IDE disk, 273
> individual
>> inserts should not take more than a second.
> 

I think that would depend on settings such as synchronous_commit, commit_delay, 
or whether 2-phase commit is being used. 

If synchronous commit is enabled and commit_delay was not used (e.g. 0), and 
you have a client synchronously making individual inserts to the DB (1 
transaction each), then surely you have delays due to waiting for each 
transaction to commit synchronously to WAL on disk? 

I believe yes / 0 are the default settings for synchronous commit and 
commit_delay. (Interestingly the manual pages do not specify.)


Assuming a 5400RPM laptop drive (which is a typical drive - some laptop drives 
run < 5000RPM), and assuming you are writing a sequential log to disk (with 
very short gaps between entries being added, e.g. no seek time, only rotational 
latency) will mean 5400 transactions per minute, 1 write per rotation. 

That's a maximum 90 transactions per second synchronised to WAL. It would take 
just over 3 seconds.


Ashik, try altering your postgresql.conf to say 'commit_delay=100' or 
'synchronous_commit=off'. Let us know if that fixes the problem. Read up on the 
options before you change them.

Graeme Bell





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