Re: Very high effective_cache_size == worse performance?

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От Scott Marlowe
Тема Re: Very high effective_cache_size == worse performance?
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Msg-id q2udcc563d11004201222se02e858fv50b78b96b9d2c015@mail.gmail.com
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Ответ на Re: Very high effective_cache_size == worse performance?  (David Kerr <dmk@mr-paradox.net>)
Ответы Re: Very high effective_cache_size == worse performance?  (Scott Carey <scott@richrelevance.com>)
Список pgsql-performance
On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 12:47 PM, David Kerr <dmk@mr-paradox.net> wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 02:15:19PM -0400, Robert Haas wrote:
> - On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 2:03 PM, David Kerr <dmk@mr-paradox.net> wrote:
> - > that thought occured to me while I was testing this. I ran a vacuumdb -z
> - > on my database during the load and it didn't impact performance at all.
> -
> - The window to run ANALYZE usefully is pretty short.  If you run it
> - before the load is complete, your stats will be wrong.  If you run it
> - after the select statements that hit the table are planned, the
> - updated stats won't arrive in time to do any good.
>
> right, but i'm loading 20 million records in 1000 record increments. so
> the analyze should affect all subsequent increments, no?

I keep thinking FK checks are taking a long time because they aren't
cached because in import they went through the ring buffer in pg or
some other way aren't in a buffer but large effective cache size says
it's 99.99% chance or better that it's in cache, and chooses a poor
plan to look them up.  Just a guess.

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