Re: a heavy duty operation on an "unused" table kills my server

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Andy Colson wrote:
On 1/13/2010 11:36 PM, Craig Ringer wrote:
Yes. My 3ware 8500-8 on a Debian Sarge box was so awful that launching a
terminal would go from a 1/4 second operation to a 5 minute operation
under heavy write load by one writer. I landed up having to modify the
driver to partially mitigate the issue, but a single user on the
terminal server performing any sort of heavy writing would still
absolutely nuke performance.

On a side note, on linux, would using the deadline scheduler resolve that?

I've never seen the deadline scheduler resolve anything. If you're out of I/O capacity and that's blocking other work, performance is dominated by the policies of the underlying controller/device caches. Think about it a minute: disks nowadays can easily have 32MB of buffer in them, right? And random read/write operations are lucky to clear 2MB/s on cheap drivers. So once the drive is filled with requests, you can easily sit there for ten seconds before the scheduler even has any input on resolving the situation. That's even more true if you've got a larger controller cache in the mix.

--
Greg Smith    2ndQuadrant   Baltimore, MD
PostgreSQL Training, Services and Support
greg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx  www.2ndQuadrant.com


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