Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-09 Thread Gregory Stewart
I installed Ubuntu 5.10 on the production server (64-Bit version), and sure
enough the peformance is like I expected. Opening up that table (320,000
records) takes 6 seconds, with CPU usage of one of the cores going up to
90% - 100% for the 6 seconds.
I assume only one core is being used per user / session / query?

Gregory


-Original Message-
From: Jim C. Nasby [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, May 04, 2006 12:47 PM
To: Gregory Stewart
Cc: Mark Kirkwood; pgsql-performance@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core


All the machines I've been able to replicate this on have been SMP w2k3
machines running SP1. I've been unable to replicate it on anything not
running w2k3, but the only 'SMP' machine I've tested in that manner was
an Intel with HT enabled. I now have an intel with HT and running w2k3
sitting in my office, but I haven't had a chance to fire it up and try
it yet. Once I test that machine it should help narrow down if this
problem exists with HT machines (which someone on -hackers mentioned
they had access to and could do testing with). If it does affect HT
machines then I suspect that this is not an issue for XP...

On Tue, May 02, 2006 at 11:27:02PM -0500, Gregory Stewart wrote:
 Jim,

 Have you seen this happening only on W2k3? I am wondering if I should try
 out 2000 Pro or XP Pro.
 Not my first choice, but if it works...



 -Original Message-
 From: Jim C. Nasby [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2006 3:29 PM
 To: Mark Kirkwood
 Cc: Gregory Stewart; pgsql-performance@postgresql.org
 Subject: Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core


 On Sun, Apr 30, 2006 at 10:59:56PM +1200, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
  Pgadmin can give misleading times for queries that return large result
  sets over a network, due to:
 
  1/ It takes time to format the (large) result set for display.
  2/ It has to count the time spent waiting for the (large) result set to
  travel across the network.
 
  You aren't running Pgadmin off the dev server are you? If not check your
  network link to dev and prod  - is one faster than the other? (etc).
 
  To eliminate Pgadmin and the network as factors try wrapping your query
  in a 'SELECT count(*) FROM (your query here) AS a', and see if it
  changes anything!

 FWIW, I've found problems running PostgreSQL on Windows in a multi-CPU
 environment on w2k3. It runs fine for some period, and then CPU and
 throughput drop to zero. So far I've been unable to track down any more
 information than that, other than the fact that I haven't been able to
 reproduce this on any single-CPU machines.
 --
 Jim C. Nasby, Sr. Engineering Consultant  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Pervasive Software  http://pervasive.comwork: 512-231-6117
 vcard: http://jim.nasby.net/pervasive.vcf   cell: 512-569-9461


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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-05 Thread Magnus Hagander
 FWIW, I've found problems running PostgreSQL on Windows in a 
 multi-CPU environment on w2k3. It runs fine for some 
 period, and 
 then CPU and throughput drop to zero. So far I've 
 been unable to 
 track down any more information than that, other than the
   fact that
 I haven't been able to reproduce this on any 
 single-CPU machines.

I have had previous correspondence about this with 
 Magnus (search 
-general and -hackers). If you uninstall SP1 the problem
   goes away. We
played a bit with potential fixes but didn't find any.
   
   Interesting; does SP2 fix the problem? Anything we can do 
 over here 
   to help?
  
  There is no SP2 for Windows 2003.
  
  Have you tried this with latest-and-greatest CVS HEAD? Meaning with 
  the new semaphore code that was committed a couple of days ago?
 
 I'd be happy to test this if someone could provide a build, 
 or if there's instructions somewhere for doing such a build...

Instructions are here:
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs.FAQ_MINGW.html

Let me know if you can't get that working an I can get a set of binaries
for you.

//Magnus

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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-04 Thread Jim C. Nasby
All the machines I've been able to replicate this on have been SMP w2k3
machines running SP1. I've been unable to replicate it on anything not
running w2k3, but the only 'SMP' machine I've tested in that manner was
an Intel with HT enabled. I now have an intel with HT and running w2k3
sitting in my office, but I haven't had a chance to fire it up and try
it yet. Once I test that machine it should help narrow down if this
problem exists with HT machines (which someone on -hackers mentioned
they had access to and could do testing with). If it does affect HT
machines then I suspect that this is not an issue for XP...

On Tue, May 02, 2006 at 11:27:02PM -0500, Gregory Stewart wrote:
 Jim,
 
 Have you seen this happening only on W2k3? I am wondering if I should try
 out 2000 Pro or XP Pro.
 Not my first choice, but if it works...
 
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Jim C. Nasby [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2006 3:29 PM
 To: Mark Kirkwood
 Cc: Gregory Stewart; pgsql-performance@postgresql.org
 Subject: Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core
 
 
 On Sun, Apr 30, 2006 at 10:59:56PM +1200, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
  Pgadmin can give misleading times for queries that return large result
  sets over a network, due to:
 
  1/ It takes time to format the (large) result set for display.
  2/ It has to count the time spent waiting for the (large) result set to
  travel across the network.
 
  You aren't running Pgadmin off the dev server are you? If not check your
  network link to dev and prod  - is one faster than the other? (etc).
 
  To eliminate Pgadmin and the network as factors try wrapping your query
  in a 'SELECT count(*) FROM (your query here) AS a', and see if it
  changes anything!
 
 FWIW, I've found problems running PostgreSQL on Windows in a multi-CPU
 environment on w2k3. It runs fine for some period, and then CPU and
 throughput drop to zero. So far I've been unable to track down any more
 information than that, other than the fact that I haven't been able to
 reproduce this on any single-CPU machines.
 --
 Jim C. Nasby, Sr. Engineering Consultant  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Pervasive Software  http://pervasive.comwork: 512-231-6117
 vcard: http://jim.nasby.net/pervasive.vcf   cell: 512-569-9461
 
 
 --
 No virus found in this incoming message.
 Checked by AVG Free Edition.
 Version: 7.1.385 / Virus Database: 268.5.1/328 - Release Date: 5/1/2006
 
 
 
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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-04 Thread Jim C. Nasby
On Wed, May 03, 2006 at 09:29:15AM +0200, Magnus Hagander wrote:
FWIW, I've found problems running PostgreSQL on Windows in a 
multi-CPU environment on w2k3. It runs fine for some period, and 
then CPU and throughput drop to zero. So far I've been unable to 
track down any more information than that, other than the 
  fact that 
I haven't been able to reproduce this on any single-CPU machines.
   
   I have had previous correspondence about this with Magnus (search 
   -general and -hackers). If you uninstall SP1 the problem 
  goes away. We 
   played a bit with potential fixes but didn't find any.
  
  Interesting; does SP2 fix the problem? Anything we can do 
  over here to help?
 
 There is no SP2 for Windows 2003.
 
 Have you tried this with latest-and-greatest CVS HEAD? Meaning with the
 new semaphore code that was committed a couple of days ago?

I'd be happy to test this if someone could provide a build, or if
there's instructions somewhere for doing such a build...
-- 
Jim C. Nasby, Sr. Engineering Consultant  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Pervasive Software  http://pervasive.comwork: 512-231-6117
vcard: http://jim.nasby.net/pervasive.vcf   cell: 512-569-9461

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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-03 Thread Gregory Stewart
I am using the onboard NVRAID controller. It has to be configured in the
BIOS and windows needs a raid driver at install to even see the raid drive.
But the onboard controller still utilizes system resources. So it is not a
pure software raid, but a mix of hardware (controller) / software I guess.
But I don't really know a whole lot about it.

-Original Message-
From: Mark Kirkwood [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, April 30, 2006 7:04 PM
To: Gregory Stewart
Cc: Theodore Loscalzo
Subject: Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core


Gregory Stewart wrote:
 Theodore,

 Thank you for your reply.
 I am using the onboard NVidia RAID that is on the Asus A8N-E motherboard,
so
 it is a software raid.
 But as I said, the CPU utilization on that machine is basically 0%. I also
 ran some system performance tests, and the machine flies including the HD
 performance, all better than the dev machine which doesn't use raid.



(Ooops sorry about so many mails), Might be worth using Google or
Technet to see if there are known performance issues with the (NVidia?)
SATA controller on the A8N-E (as there seem to be a lot of crappy SATA
controllers around at the moment).

Also (I'm not a Windows guy) by software RAID, do you mean you are using
the firmware RAID1 from the controller or are you using Windows
software RAID1 on the two disks directly?

Cheers

Mark


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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-03 Thread Gregory Stewart
Jim,

Have you seen this happening only on W2k3? I am wondering if I should try
out 2000 Pro or XP Pro.
Not my first choice, but if it works...



-Original Message-
From: Jim C. Nasby [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2006 3:29 PM
To: Mark Kirkwood
Cc: Gregory Stewart; pgsql-performance@postgresql.org
Subject: Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core


On Sun, Apr 30, 2006 at 10:59:56PM +1200, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
 Pgadmin can give misleading times for queries that return large result
 sets over a network, due to:

 1/ It takes time to format the (large) result set for display.
 2/ It has to count the time spent waiting for the (large) result set to
 travel across the network.

 You aren't running Pgadmin off the dev server are you? If not check your
 network link to dev and prod  - is one faster than the other? (etc).

 To eliminate Pgadmin and the network as factors try wrapping your query
 in a 'SELECT count(*) FROM (your query here) AS a', and see if it
 changes anything!

FWIW, I've found problems running PostgreSQL on Windows in a multi-CPU
environment on w2k3. It runs fine for some period, and then CPU and
throughput drop to zero. So far I've been unable to track down any more
information than that, other than the fact that I haven't been able to
reproduce this on any single-CPU machines.
--
Jim C. Nasby, Sr. Engineering Consultant  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Pervasive Software  http://pervasive.comwork: 512-231-6117
vcard: http://jim.nasby.net/pervasive.vcf   cell: 512-569-9461


--
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Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.385 / Virus Database: 268.5.1/328 - Release Date: 5/1/2006



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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-03 Thread Magnus Hagander
   FWIW, I've found problems running PostgreSQL on Windows in a 
   multi-CPU environment on w2k3. It runs fine for some period, and 
   then CPU and throughput drop to zero. So far I've been unable to 
   track down any more information than that, other than the 
 fact that 
   I haven't been able to reproduce this on any single-CPU machines.
  
  I have had previous correspondence about this with Magnus (search 
  -general and -hackers). If you uninstall SP1 the problem 
 goes away. We 
  played a bit with potential fixes but didn't find any.
 
 Interesting; does SP2 fix the problem? Anything we can do 
 over here to help?

There is no SP2 for Windows 2003.

Have you tried this with latest-and-greatest CVS HEAD? Meaning with the
new semaphore code that was committed a couple of days ago?

//Magnus

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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-03 Thread Jan de Visser
On Wednesday 03 May 2006 03:29, Magnus Hagander wrote:
FWIW, I've found problems running PostgreSQL on Windows in a
multi-CPU environment on w2k3. It runs fine for some period, and
then CPU and throughput drop to zero. So far I've been unable to
track down any more information than that, other than the
 
  fact that
 
I haven't been able to reproduce this on any single-CPU machines.
  
   I have had previous correspondence about this with Magnus (search
   -general and -hackers). If you uninstall SP1 the problem
 
  goes away. We
 
   played a bit with potential fixes but didn't find any.
 
  Interesting; does SP2 fix the problem? Anything we can do
  over here to help?

 There is no SP2 for Windows 2003.

That's what I thought. Jim confused me there for a minute.


 Have you tried this with latest-and-greatest CVS HEAD? Meaning with the
 new semaphore code that was committed a couple of days ago?

No I haven't. Worth a test on a rainy afternoon I'd say...


 //Magnus

jan

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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-02 Thread Jim C. Nasby
On Sun, Apr 30, 2006 at 10:59:56PM +1200, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
 Pgadmin can give misleading times for queries that return large result 
 sets over a network, due to:
 
 1/ It takes time to format the (large) result set for display.
 2/ It has to count the time spent waiting for the (large) result set to 
 travel across the network.
 
 You aren't running Pgadmin off the dev server are you? If not check your 
 network link to dev and prod  - is one faster than the other? (etc).
 
 To eliminate Pgadmin and the network as factors try wrapping your query 
 in a 'SELECT count(*) FROM (your query here) AS a', and see if it 
 changes anything!

FWIW, I've found problems running PostgreSQL on Windows in a multi-CPU
environment on w2k3. It runs fine for some period, and then CPU and
throughput drop to zero. So far I've been unable to track down any more
information than that, other than the fact that I haven't been able to
reproduce this on any single-CPU machines.
-- 
Jim C. Nasby, Sr. Engineering Consultant  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Pervasive Software  http://pervasive.comwork: 512-231-6117
vcard: http://jim.nasby.net/pervasive.vcf   cell: 512-569-9461

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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-02 Thread Jan de Visser
On Tuesday 02 May 2006 16:28, Jim C. Nasby wrote:
 On Sun, Apr 30, 2006 at 10:59:56PM +1200, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
  Pgadmin can give misleading times for queries that return large result
  sets over a network, due to:
 
  1/ It takes time to format the (large) result set for display.
  2/ It has to count the time spent waiting for the (large) result set to
  travel across the network.
 
  You aren't running Pgadmin off the dev server are you? If not check your
  network link to dev and prod  - is one faster than the other? (etc).
 
  To eliminate Pgadmin and the network as factors try wrapping your query
  in a 'SELECT count(*) FROM (your query here) AS a', and see if it
  changes anything!

 FWIW, I've found problems running PostgreSQL on Windows in a multi-CPU
 environment on w2k3. It runs fine for some period, and then CPU and
 throughput drop to zero. So far I've been unable to track down any more
 information than that, other than the fact that I haven't been able to
 reproduce this on any single-CPU machines.

I have had previous correspondence about this with Magnus (search -general 
and -hackers). If you uninstall SP1 the problem goes away. We played a bit 
with potential fixes but didn't find any.

jan

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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-05-02 Thread Jim C. Nasby
On Tue, May 02, 2006 at 06:49:48PM -0400, Jan de Visser wrote:
 On Tuesday 02 May 2006 16:28, Jim C. Nasby wrote:
  On Sun, Apr 30, 2006 at 10:59:56PM +1200, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
   Pgadmin can give misleading times for queries that return large result
   sets over a network, due to:
  
   1/ It takes time to format the (large) result set for display.
   2/ It has to count the time spent waiting for the (large) result set to
   travel across the network.
  
   You aren't running Pgadmin off the dev server are you? If not check your
   network link to dev and prod  - is one faster than the other? (etc).
  
   To eliminate Pgadmin and the network as factors try wrapping your query
   in a 'SELECT count(*) FROM (your query here) AS a', and see if it
   changes anything!
 
  FWIW, I've found problems running PostgreSQL on Windows in a multi-CPU
  environment on w2k3. It runs fine for some period, and then CPU and
  throughput drop to zero. So far I've been unable to track down any more
  information than that, other than the fact that I haven't been able to
  reproduce this on any single-CPU machines.
 
 I have had previous correspondence about this with Magnus (search -general 
 and -hackers). If you uninstall SP1 the problem goes away. We played a bit 
 with potential fixes but didn't find any.

Interesting; does SP2 fix the problem? Anything we can do over here to
help?
-- 
Jim C. Nasby, Sr. Engineering Consultant  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Pervasive Software  http://pervasive.comwork: 512-231-6117
vcard: http://jim.nasby.net/pervasive.vcf   cell: 512-569-9461

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Re: [PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-04-30 Thread Mark Kirkwood

Gregory Stewart wrote:

Hello,

We are currently developing a web application and have the webserver and 
PostgreSQL with our dev db running on a machine with these specs:


Win 2003 standard
AMD Athlon XP 3000 / 2.1 GHZ
2 Gig ram
120 gig SATA HD
PostgreSQL 8.1.0
Default pgsql configuration + shared buffers = 30,000

The performance of postgresql and our web application is good on that 
machine, but we decided to build a dedicated database server for our 
production database that scales better and that we can also use for internal 
applications (CRM and so on).


To make a long story short, we built a machine with these specs:

Windows 2003 Standard
AMD Opteron 165 Dual Core / running at 2 GHZ
2 gig ram
2 x 150 Gig SATA II HDs in RAID 1 mode (mirror)
PostgreSQL 8.1.3
Default pgsql configuration + shared buffers = 30,000

Perfomance tests in windows show that the new box outperforms our dev 
machine quite a bit in CPU, HD and memory performance.


I did some EXPLAIN ANALYZE tests on queries and the results were very good, 
3 to 4 times faster than our dev db.


However one thing is really throwing me off.
When I open a table with 320,000 rows / 16 fields in the pgadmin tool (v 
1.4.0) it takes about 6 seconds on the dev server to display the result (all 
rows). During these 6 seconds the CPU usage jumps to 90%-100%.


When I open the same table on the new, faster, better production box, it 
takes 28 seconds!?! During these 28 seconds the CPU usage jumps to 30% for 1 
second, and goes back to 0% for the remaining time while it is running the 
query.


What is going wrong here? It is my understanding that postgresql supports 
multi-core / cpu environments out of the box, but to me it appears that it 
isn't utilizing any of the 2 cpu's available. I doubt that my server is that 
fast that it can perform this operation in idle mode.


I played around with the shared buffers and tried out versions 8.1.3, 8.1.2, 
8.1.0 with the same result.


Has anyone experienced this kind of behaviour before?
How representative is the query performance in pgadmin?



Pgadmin can give misleading times for queries that return large result 
sets over a network, due to:


1/ It takes time to format the (large) result set for display.
2/ It has to count the time spent waiting for the (large) result set to 
travel across the network.


You aren't running Pgadmin off the dev server are you? If not check your 
network link to dev and prod  - is one faster than the other? (etc).


To eliminate Pgadmin and the network as factors try wrapping your query 
in a 'SELECT count(*) FROM (your query here) AS a', and see if it 
changes anything!


Cheers

Mark

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[PERFORM] Performance Issues on Opteron Dual Core

2006-04-29 Thread Gregory Stewart
Hello,

We are currently developing a web application and have the webserver and 
PostgreSQL with our dev db running on a machine with these specs:

Win 2003 standard
AMD Athlon XP 3000 / 2.1 GHZ
2 Gig ram
120 gig SATA HD
PostgreSQL 8.1.0
Default pgsql configuration + shared buffers = 30,000

The performance of postgresql and our web application is good on that 
machine, but we decided to build a dedicated database server for our 
production database that scales better and that we can also use for internal 
applications (CRM and so on).

To make a long story short, we built a machine with these specs:

Windows 2003 Standard
AMD Opteron 165 Dual Core / running at 2 GHZ
2 gig ram
2 x 150 Gig SATA II HDs in RAID 1 mode (mirror)
PostgreSQL 8.1.3
Default pgsql configuration + shared buffers = 30,000

Perfomance tests in windows show that the new box outperforms our dev 
machine quite a bit in CPU, HD and memory performance.

I did some EXPLAIN ANALYZE tests on queries and the results were very good, 
3 to 4 times faster than our dev db.

However one thing is really throwing me off.
When I open a table with 320,000 rows / 16 fields in the pgadmin tool (v 
1.4.0) it takes about 6 seconds on the dev server to display the result (all 
rows). During these 6 seconds the CPU usage jumps to 90%-100%.

When I open the same table on the new, faster, better production box, it 
takes 28 seconds!?! During these 28 seconds the CPU usage jumps to 30% for 1 
second, and goes back to 0% for the remaining time while it is running the 
query.

What is going wrong here? It is my understanding that postgresql supports 
multi-core / cpu environments out of the box, but to me it appears that it 
isn't utilizing any of the 2 cpu's available. I doubt that my server is that 
fast that it can perform this operation in idle mode.

I played around with the shared buffers and tried out versions 8.1.3, 8.1.2, 
8.1.0 with the same result.

Has anyone experienced this kind of behaviour before?
How representative is the query performance in pgadmin?

I appreciate your ideas, comments and help.

Thanks,
Greg 



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