Hi, On Friday, September 21, 2012 03:47:56 PM Jagdish Motwani wrote: > Recently i upgraded my kernel from 2.6.29.6 to 2.6.35.14. > > After upgrading i got very poor performance on my postgre database. > > > My test.sql contains 10000 postgre insert query > > > Linux 2.6.29.6 > > time psql -U user -d database -f test.sql > /dev/null > real 0m 7.23s > user 0m 0.38s > sys 0m 0.12s > > > > Linux 2.6.35.14 > > # time psql -U user -d database -f test.sql > /dev/null > real 1m 4.05s > user 0m 0.44s > sys 0m 0.12 How do the results to this look if you use psql -1/--single-transaction? > I even tried Linux 3.5.4 and got similar results. > > Using git bisect, i got commit ab0a9735e06914ce4d2a94ffa41497dbc142fe7f > > Is it a behavior change or am i missing something? Are there any > workarounds for this? I guess youre using some form of virtualization? I think what youre observing is just that access via raw devices previously lied about consistency. As the commit observes several virtualization solutions can use raw device access. If all those 10000 inserts above happen in individual transactions - which would happen if youre not using transactions explicitly - each and every one of them will cause a single disk write if they are executed sequentially. A typical rotating disks can do between 80-160 such writes. If you devide 10k transactions by 150 synchronous writes a second you get ~66s which pretty nicely fits your time above. If you don't care about loosing a very small amount of transactions (up to a second with the default settings) you can disable the synchronous_commit setting in postgres. No earlier commits/changes will be lost/corrupted. You can change that setting per transaction, per session/connection, per user, per database or globally. Greetings, Andres -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html