Have you vacuumed the original (slow) table? /dev/mrg
On 10/1/07, Giulio Cesare Solaroli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello everybody, > > today I have being able to do some more tests and I have found out > that the problem seems to be caused by a "fragmentation" of the data > on the Postgresql table space. > > I have created a copy of the table where delete statements where very > slow (using the "create table .... as select from ..." syntax) and > matching the structure of the new copy to the original one (index and > constraint wise); in this new table the performance of the delete > statements where from 20 to 100 times faster that in the original > table. :-( > > This rules out Cayenne as the culprit, but leave me wondering how to > avoid this degradation of performances on Postgresql; but this is > probably not the right place where to start. > > Thank you everybody for your attention and for the very useful > suggestions or pointers that greatly helped me in understanding this > problem. > > Best regards, > > Giulio Cesare > > > > > > > > On 9/23/07, Giulio Cesare Solaroli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hello, > > > > I have collected a few more data, as suggested by Aristedes. > > > > On 9/23/07, Giulio Cesare Solaroli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > On 9/23/07, Aristedes Maniatis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > > > > On 23/09/2007, at 5:38 PM, Giulio Cesare Solaroli wrote: > > > > > > > > > log4j.logger.org.apache.cayenne=ERROR > > > > > log4j.logger.org.apache.cayenne.access.QueryLogger=DEBUG > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Is there anything going on on the Cayenne code between the last [batch > > > > > bind:xxx] log and the "updated" log? > > > > > > > > Well, you could always try: > > > > > > > > log4j.logger.org.apache.cayenne=DEBUG > > > > > > Argh. I should have thought about this myself. :-( > > > > Even with full log enabled I got the same exact log, so it looks like > > all the time is really spent on the DB. And the next logs confirm > > this. > > > > > > > > > Is all this time spent on the DB only? > > > > > > > > What does turning on log_min_duration_statement tell you? > > > > I have being able to run PostgreSQL with logging enabled only on my > > Parallels instance, as I can not start/stop the db on the deployment > > server; this will make the absolute times not that relevant, but I > > hope we can understand something more anyway. > > > > First of all, there is a huge difference between the deletion time of > > the "cascade" records in different tables. > > > > [...] > > LOG: duration: 0.020 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM connection.USRCNNRQS WHERE ID_USRCNNRQS = $1] > > LOG: duration: 0.021 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM connection.USRCNNRQS WHERE ID_USRCNNRQS = $1] > > LOG: duration: 0.020 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM connection.USRCNNRQS WHERE ID_USRCNNRQS = $1] > > [...] > > > > To delete rows on the USRCNNRQS (aka UserConnectionRequest) table, it > > averages at bout 0.020 ms. > > > > > > For another table (USRCNN aka UserConnection) the times range from > > 0.145 to 0.060, for later settling for 0.040 ms: > > > > [...] > > LOG: duration: 0.090 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM connection.USRCNN WHERE ID_USRCNN = $1] > > LOG: duration: 0.071 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM connection.USRCNN WHERE ID_USRCNN = $1] > > LOG: duration: 0.067 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM connection.USRCNN WHERE ID_USRCNN = $1] > > [...] > > > > > > It later took 43 seconds (!!) to parse and execute the deletion of a > > single record, ... > > [...] > > LOG: statement: PREPARE S_5 AS DELETE FROM clipperz.RCR WHERE ID_RCR = $1 > > LOG: statement: <BIND> > > LOG: statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: DELETE FROM > > clipperz.RCR WHERE ID_RCR = $1] > > LOG: duration: 42.998 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM clipperz.RCR WHERE ID_RCR = $1] > > LOG: statement: <BIND> > > LOG: statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: DELETE FROM > > clipperz.RCR WHERE ID_RCR = $1] > > [...] > > > > ...later spotting time as low as 0.042 for the execution of the same query: > > [...] > > LOG: duration: 0.042 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM clipperz.RCR WHERE ID_RCR = $1] > > LOG: statement: <BIND> > > LOG: statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: DELETE FROM > > clipperz.RCR WHERE ID_RCR = $1] > > [...] > > > > But as I may understand this different timing may be due to the > > interaction of the Virtual machine with the real server, what is > > puzzling me is that the deletion from the latest table had a > > "constant" time of about 2 seconds each: > > [...] > > LOG: duration: 1929.043 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM clipperz.RCRVRS WHERE ID_RCRVRS = $1] > > LOG: duration: 1991.311 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM clipperz.RCRVRS WHERE ID_RCRVRS = $1] > > LOG: duration: 2078.249 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM clipperz.RCRVRS WHERE ID_RCRVRS = $1] > > LOG: duration: 2015.047 ms statement: EXECUTE <unnamed> [PREPARE: > > DELETE FROM clipperz.RCRVRS WHERE ID_RCRVRS = $1] > > [...] > > > > > > If nobody as something else to suggest, I will try to get back the the > > DB schema to see if there is some constraint/index that is slowing > > down the deletion of these records. > > > > Thank you very much for your attention. > > > > Best regards, > > > > Giulio Cesare > > >
