Обсуждение: .so functions and SQL queries
I ran some test to see how many queries PostGreSQL can handle per seconds through the libpq library : not more than 200. So, I was wondering if it is possible to write C function, compiled as .so which can perform SQL queries such as SELECT or UPDATE ? I think it could increase performance... thanx. Guillaume
> I ran some test to see how many queries PostGreSQL can handle per > seconds through the libpq library : not more than 200. > > So, I was wondering if it is possible to write C function, compiled as > .so which can perform SQL queries such as SELECT or UPDATE ? > > I think it could increase performance... Care to share the specs on the system, or was that number consistent across several setups? Greg
>> I ran some test to see how many queries PostGreSQL can handle per >> seconds through the libpq library : not more than 200. >> [...] > > Care to share the specs on the system, or was that number consistent across > several setups? > I made other tests today and obtain better results : I have a program that forks itself as many times as I want (parameter) and which connects to the base and then executes numerous times the same fetchs (another parameter) : 3 SELECT via libpq and a call to a PLPGSQL Function that performs 3 SELECT and 3 UPDATE. In conclusion, PostGreSQL handles about 65 fetches/sec with 15 processes (= 15 connections). It means about 550 queries per second. The postmaster has the -F -N 256 -B 4096 options The tests are on a Bi-PIII 660 with 1GB RAM. Are these results good for you ? Or do you think PG can do much better ?
Guillaume =?ISO-8859-1?Q?L=E9mery?= <glemery@comclick.com> writes: > So, I was wondering if it is possible to write C function, compiled as > .so which can perform SQL queries such as SELECT or UPDATE ? See the SPI features. I'm not convinced this will give you any huge performance increase, however, since you still need to get the data in and out somehow. regards, tom lane