| From: | "scott(dot)marlowe" <scott(dot)marlowe(at)ihs(dot)com> |
|---|---|
| To: | Michael Mattox <michael(dot)mattox(at)verideon(dot)com> |
| Cc: | Howard Oblowitz <HowardO(at)LEWIS-STORES(dot)com>, <pgsql-performance(at)postgresql(dot)org> |
| Subject: | Re: Version 7 question |
| Date: | 2003-07-01 14:22:28 |
| Message-ID: | Pine.LNX.4.33.0307010819270.16496-100000@css120.ihs.com |
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| Lists: | pgsql-performance |
On Tue, 1 Jul 2003, Michael Mattox wrote:
> My understanding is to use as much effect cache as possible, so figure out
> how much ram you need for your other applications & OS and then give the
> rest to postgres as effective cache.
>
> What I learned to day is the shared_buffers 25% of RAM guideline.
Note that the best guideline is the one that your testing shows you makes
the most sense. If you never access more than a few megs at a time, then
there's no need to have 25% of a machine with 1 gig given over to the
database's shared buffers, it's better to let the machine cache that for
you. If you access hundreds of megs at a time, then 25% of RAM is a good
idea. Usually 25% of RAM is about the max that gives good results, but in
some corner cases, using more still makes sense. Usually at that point,
you've also increased sort_mem up a bit too, but be careful, sort_mem is
PER SORT, not per backend or per database cluster, so it can add up very
quickly and make the machine run out of RAM.
Setting these settings is a lot like playing Jenga (the game with the
wooden blocks stacked up where you pull one out and put them on top one at
a time.) Everything seems just fine, the machine's getting faster and
faster, everybody's loving life, then you crank one up a little too high,
cause a swap storm, and the whole thing slows to a crawl.
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