On Wed, Sep 19, 2018 at 7:44 PM Cédric Villemain <cedric@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Le 19/09/2018 à 05:29, Thomas Munro a écrit : > > On Wed, Sep 19, 2018 at 1:35 PM jimmy <mpokky@xxxxxxx> wrote: > >> I use select pg_prewarm('table1','read','main') to load data of table1 into the memory. > >> when I use select count(1) from table1 group by aa to query data. > >> I find the speed of query is not fast, I wonder whether it query data from memory. > >> And it is slower than Oracle, both of Oracle and Postgresql has same table and count of data. > >> when pg_prewarm use 'read' mode, the data is put into the OS cache, how to examine the table which is pg_prewarmed into the OS cache . > >> I know pg_buffercache ,but it just examine the table in the shared buffer of Postgresql, not the table in the OS cache. > > > > This is a quick and dirty hack, but it might do what you want: > > > > https://github.com/macdice/pgdata_mincore > > > > Tested on FreeBSD, not sure how well it'll travel. > > You can use pgfincore extension for that purpose, and more. > > https://github.com/klando/pgfincore/blob/master/README.md Yes, if you only want to know *how many* pages are in the OS page cache. pgdata_mincore shows you which PG blocks are in the page cache in the same format as pg_buffercache, which is useful for studying double buffering effects. Maybe I should turn it into a patch for pgfincore... -- Thomas Munro http://www.enterprisedb.com