Tom Lane wrote:
> Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> writes:
> > I think at some point we have to admit that _polling_ the tables, which
> > is what autovacuum does, just isn't going to work well, no matter how
> > much it is tweeked, and another approach should be considered for
> > certain workload cases.
>
> Autovacuum polls in its current, first-generation implementation;
> what I said upthread was it needs to be smarter than that. I am not
> sure how you get from that to the conclusion that the very next step
> is to abandon the vacuuming approach altogether.
I am not ready to abandon autovacuum, but as I stated later the UPDATE
with no key change case is common enought that it could be handled
better without involving autovacuum and its limitations.
As I remember, most databases have problem with DELETE/INSERT cycles,
but we seem to be hit by UPDATE performance more than most, and more
than is wise.
> What I see in this discussion is a huge amount of "the grass must be
> greener on the other side" syndrome, and hardly any recognition that
> every technique has its downsides and complications. Furthermore,
> I do not believe that this project has the ability to support multiple
> fundamental storage models, as a number of people seem to be blithely
> suggesting. We're having a hard enough time debugging and optimizing
> *one* storage model. I think the correct path forward is to stick with
> the same basic storage model and vacuuming concept, and address the
> known performance issues with better-optimized vacuuming. No, it will
> never be perfect for every scenario, but we can certainly make it much
> better than it is now, without risking killing the project by
> introducing undebuggable, unmaintainable complexity.
Well, are you suggesting we just stop improving the database? I am sure
not. But, your suggestion is that we can't do better without incurring
more complexity (true), and that complexity will not be worth it. I
don't agree with that until I see some proposals, and shutting down
discussion because they will add complexity or are fruitless seems
unwise.
-- Bruce Momjian bruce@momjian.us EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com
+ If your life is a hard drive, Christ can be your backup. +