Re: speeding up table creation

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Rainer Mager wrote:

I have an interesting performance improvement need. As part of the automatic test suite we run in our development environment, we re-initialize our test database a number of times in order to ensure it is clean before running a test. We currently do this by dropping the public schema and then recreating our tables (roughly 30 tables total). After that we do normal inserts, etc, but never with very much data. My question is, what settings can we tweak to improve performance is this scenario? Specifically, if there was a way to tell Postgres to keep all operations in memory, that would probably be ideal.


What is the test part? In other words, do you start with a known initial database with all empty tables then run the tests or is part of the test itself the creation of those tables? How much data is in the initial database if the tables aren't empty. Creating 30 empty tables should take a trivial amount of time. Also, are there other schemas than public?

A couple ideas/comments:

You cannot keep the data in memory (that is, you can't disable writing to the disk). But since you don't care about data loss, you could turn off fsync in postgresql.conf. From a test perspective you should be fine - it will only be an issue in the event of a crash and then you can just restart with a fresh load. Remember, however, that any performance benchmarks won't translate to production use (of course they don't translate if you are using ramdisk anyway).

Note that the system tables are updated whenever you add/delete/modify tables. Make sure they are being vacuumed or your performance will slowly degrade.

My approach is to create a database exactly as you want it to be at the start of your tests (fully vacuumed and all) and then use it as a template to be used to create the testdb each time. Then you can just (with appropriate connection options) run "dropdb thetestdb" followed by "createdb --template thetestdbtemplate thetestdb" which is substantially faster than deleting and recreating tables - especially if they contain much data.

Cheers,
Steve


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