Thanks for the reply. I'll try upload the execution plan with Explain (analyse, buffer) for website: https://explain.depesz.com/ I'm make an experiment for a scientific research and this is what I find strange, explaining better, strange HDD performance far outweigh the performance of an SSD. Do you think that if you run a VACUMM FULL the performance with the SSD will be better than a 15Krpm SAS HDD? Best Regards Neto <div id="DAB4FAD8-2DD7-40BB-A1B8-4E2AA1F9FDF2"><br /> <table style="border-top: 1px solid #D3D4DE;"> <tr> <td style="width: 55px; padding-top: 18px;"><a href="https://www.avast.com/sig-email?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_campaign=sig-email&utm_content=webmail" target="_blank"><img src="https://ipmcdn.avast.com/images/icons/icon-envelope-tick-round-orange-animated-no-repeat-v1.gif" alt="" width="46" height="29" style="width: 46px; height: 29px;" /></a></td> <td style="width: 470px; padding-top: 17px; color: #41424e; font-size: 13px; font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; line-height: 18px;">Livre de vírus. <a href="https://www.avast.com/sig-email?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_campaign=sig-email&utm_content=webmail" target="_blank" style="color: #4453ea;">www.avast.com</a>. </td> </tr> </table> <a href="#DAB4FAD8-2DD7-40BB-A1B8-4E2AA1F9FDF2" width="1" height="1"></a></div> 2018-01-14 19:40 GMT-02:00 Justin Pryzby <pryzby@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 12:44:00PM -0800, Neto pr wrote: >> Dear all >> >> Someone help me analyze the two execution plans below (Explain ANALYZE >> used), is the query 9 of TPC-H benchmark [1]. >> >> I'm using a server HP Intel Xeon 2.8GHz/4-core - Memory 8GB HDD SAS 320GB >> 15 Krpm AND SSD Sansung EVO 500GB. >> >> I think maybe the execution plan is using more write operations, and so the >> HDD SAS 15Krpm has been faster. > > The query plan is all garbled by mail , could you resend? Or post a link from > https://explain.depesz.com/ > > To see if the query is causing many writes (due to dirty pages, sorts, etc), > run with explain(analyze,buffers) > > But from what I could tell, your problems are here: > > -> Parallel Seq Scan on lineitem (cost=0.00..5861332.93 rows=100005093 width=41) (actual TIME=3.494..842667.110 rows=80004097 loops=3) > vs > -> Parallel Seq Scan on lineitem (cost=0.00..5861333.40 rows=100005140 width=41) (actual TIME=41.805..224438.909 rows=80004097 loops=3) > > -> Seq Scan on partsupp (cost=0.00..1052983.08 rows=31999708 width=22) (actual TIME=0.033..228828.149 rows=32000000 loops=3) > vs > -> Seq Scan on partsupp (cost=0.00..1052934.38 rows=31994838 width=22) (actual TIME=0.037..37865.003 rows=32000000 loops=3) > > Can you reproduce the speed difference using dd ? > time sudo dd if=/dev/sdX of=/dev/null bs=1M count=32K skip=$((128*$RANDOM/32)) # set bs to optimal_io_size > > Or: bonnie++ -f -n0 > > What OS/kernel are you using? LVM? filesystem? I/O scheduler? partitions? > readahead? blockdev --getra > > If you're running under linux, maybe you can just send the output of: > for a in /sys/block/sdX/queue/*; do echo "$a `cat $a`"; done > or: tail /sys/block/sdX/queue/{minimum_io_size,optimal_io_size,read_ahead_kb,scheduler,rotational,max_sectors_kb,logical_block_size,physical_block_size} > > Justin