From: | Rémy Beaumont <remyb(at)medrium(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | Tom Lane <tgl(at)sss(dot)pgh(dot)pa(dot)us> |
Cc: | pgsql-performance(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: High load and iowait but no disk access |
Date: | 2005-08-30 16:42:13 |
Message-ID: | ad8cc48ec21f994f523a0f4f5930dcb9@medrium.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-performance |
On 30-Aug-05, at 12:29, Tom Lane wrote:
> =?ISO-8859-1?Q?R=E9my_Beaumont?= <remyb(at)medrium(dot)com> writes:
>> On 30-Aug-05, at 12:15, Tom Lane wrote:
>>> I know zip about NetApps, but doesn't the 8th column indicate pretty
>>> steady disk reads?
>
>> Yes, but they are very low.
>
> Sure, but that's more or less what you'd expect if the thing is
> randomly
> seeking all over the disk :-(. Just because it's a NetApp doesn't mean
> it's got zero seek time.
Per NetApp, the disk utilization percentage they report does include
seek time, not just read/write operations.
NetApp has been involved in trying to figure out what is going on and
their claim is that the NetApp filer is not IO bound.
>
> You did not say what sort of query this is, but I gather that it's
> doing
> an indexscan on a table that is not at all in index order.
Yes, most of those queries are doing an indexscan. It's a fresh
restore of our production database that we have vacuumed/analyzed.
> Possible
> solutions involve reverting to a seqscan (have you forced the planner
> to
> choose an indexscan here, either directly or by lowering
> random_page_cost?)
No.
> or CLUSTERing the table by the index (which would need to be repeated
> periodically, so it's not a great answer).
Will try to cluster the tables and see if it changes anything. Still
doesn't explain what is going on with those seeks.
Thanks,
Rémy
>
> regards, tom lane
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