Limiting the queries was our initial thought but we then hit a problem
with connection pooling which didn't implement a fifo algorithm. Looks
like I'll have to look deeper into the connection pooling. So you think the problem might be context switching on the server, I'll take a closer look at the this Thanks Matthew Sven Geisler wrote: Hi Matthew, I know exactly what you experience. We had a 4-way DC Opteron and Pg 7.4 too. You should monitor context switches. First suggest upgrade to 8.2.5 because the scale up is much better with 8.2. You need to limit the number of concurrent queries to less than 8 (8 cores) if you need to stay with Pg 7.4. The memory setting is looking good to me. I would increase sort_mem and effective_cache_size, but this would solve your problem. Best regards Sven. Matthew Lunnon schrieb:Hi, I have a 4 * dual core 64bit AMD OPTERON server with 16G of RAM, running postgres 7.4.3. This has been recompiled on the server for 64 stored procedure parameters, (I assume this makes postgres 64 bit but are not sure). When the server gets under load from database connections executing reads, lets say 20 - 40 concurrent reads, the CPU's seem to limit at about 30-35% usage with no iowait reported. If I run a simple select at this time it takes 5 seconds, the same query runs in 300 millis when the server is not under load so it seems that the database is not performing well even though there is plenty of spare CPU. There does not appear to be large amounts of disk IO and my database is about 5.5G so this should fit comfortably in RAM. changes to postgresql.sql: max_connections = 500 shared_buffers = 96000 sort_mem = 10240 effective_cache_size = 1000000 Does anyone have any ideas what my bottle neck might be and what I can do about it? Thanks for any help. Matthew. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: explain analyze is your friend -- Matthew Lunnon Technical Consultant RWA Ltd. mlunnon@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Tel: +44 (0)29 2081 5056 www.rwa-net.co.uk -- |