Thread

Commits

  1. Fix issues in pg_stat_wal.

  2. Change data type of counters in BufferUsage and WalUsage from long to int64.

  1. wal stats questions

    Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2021-03-24T23:22:24Z

    Hi,
    
    I got a few questions about the wal stats while working on the shmem
    stats patch:
    
    1) What is the motivation to have both prevWalUsage and pgWalUsage,
       instead of just accumulating the stats since the last submission?
       There doesn't seem to be any comment explaining it? Computing
       differences to previous values, and copying to prev*, isn't free. I
       assume this is out of a fear that the stats could get reset before
       they're used for instrument.c purposes - but who knows?
    
    2) Why is there both pgstat_send_wal() and pgstat_report_wal()? With the
       former being used by wal writer, the latter by most other processes?
       There again don't seem to be comments explaining this.
    
    3) Doing if (memcmp(&WalStats, &all_zeroes, sizeof(PgStat_MsgWal)) == 0)
       just to figure out if there's been any changes isn't all that
       cheap. This is regularly exercised in read-only workloads too. Seems
       adding a boolean WalStats.have_pending = true or such would be
       better.
    
    4) For plain backends pgstat_report_wal() is called by
       pgstat_report_stat() - but it is not checked as part of the "Don't
       expend a clock check if nothing to do" check at the top.  It's
       probably rare to have pending wal stats without also passing one of
       the other conditions, but ...
    
    Generally the various patches seems to to have a lot of the boilerplate
    style comments (like "Prepare and send the message"), but very little in
    the way of explaining the design.
    
    Greetings,
    
    Andres Freund
    
    
    
    
  2. Re: wal stats questions

    Masahiro Ikeda <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-03-25T01:51:56Z

    
    On 2021/03/25 8:22, Andres Freund wrote:
    > Hi,
    > 
    > I got a few questions about the wal stats while working on the shmem
    > stats patch:
    
    Thanks for your reviews.
    
    
    > 1) What is the motivation to have both prevWalUsage and pgWalUsage,
    >    instead of just accumulating the stats since the last submission?
    >    There doesn't seem to be any comment explaining it? Computing
    >    differences to previous values, and copying to prev*, isn't free. I
    >    assume this is out of a fear that the stats could get reset before
    >    they're used for instrument.c purposes - but who knows?
    
    Is your point that it's better to call pgWalUsage = 0; after sending the
    stats? My understanding is as same as your assumption. For example,
    pg_stat_statements.c use pgWalUsage and calculate the diff.
    
    But, because the stats may be sent after the transaction is finished, it
    doesn't seem to lead wrong stats if pgWalUsage = 0 is called. So, I agree your
    suggestion.
    
    If the extension wants to know the walusage diff across two transactions,
    it may lead to wrong stats, but I think it won't happen.
    
    
    > 2) Why is there both pgstat_send_wal() and pgstat_report_wal()? With the
    >    former being used by wal writer, the latter by most other processes?
    >    There again don't seem to be comments explaining this.
    
    To control the transmission interval for the wal writer because it may send
    the stats too frequency, and to omit to calculate the generated wal stats
    because it doesn't generate wal records. But, now I think it's better to merge
    them.
    
    
    
    > 3) Doing if (memcmp(&WalStats, &all_zeroes, sizeof(PgStat_MsgWal)) == 0)
    >    just to figure out if there's been any changes isn't all that
    >    cheap. This is regularly exercised in read-only workloads too. Seems
    >    adding a boolean WalStats.have_pending = true or such would be
    >    better.
    
    I understood that for backends, this may leads performance degradation and
    this problem is not only for the WalStats but also SLRUStats.
    
    I wondered the degradation is so big because pgstat_report_stat() checks if at
    least PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL msec is passed since it last sent before check the
    diff. If my understanding is correct, to get timestamp is more expensive.
    
    
    
    > 4) For plain backends pgstat_report_wal() is called by
    >    pgstat_report_stat() - but it is not checked as part of the "Don't
    >    expend a clock check if nothing to do" check at the top.  It's
    >    probably rare to have pending wal stats without also passing one of
    >    the other conditions, but ...
    
    (I'm not confidence my understanding of your comment is right.)
    You mean that we need to expend a clock check in pgstat_report_wal()?
    I think it's unnecessary because pgstat_report_stat() is already checked it.
    
    
    
    > Generally the various patches seems to to have a lot of the boilerplate
    > style comments (like "Prepare and send the message"), but very little in
    > the way of explaining the design.
    
    Sorry for that. I'll be careful.
    
    
    Regards,
    -- 
    Masahiro Ikeda
    NTT DATA CORPORATION
    
    
    
    
  3. Re: wal stats questions

    Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2021-03-25T04:07:26Z

    Hi,
    
    On 2021-03-25 10:51:56 +0900, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    > On 2021/03/25 8:22, Andres Freund wrote:
    > > 1) What is the motivation to have both prevWalUsage and pgWalUsage,
    > >    instead of just accumulating the stats since the last submission?
    > >    There doesn't seem to be any comment explaining it? Computing
    > >    differences to previous values, and copying to prev*, isn't free. I
    > >    assume this is out of a fear that the stats could get reset before
    > >    they're used for instrument.c purposes - but who knows?
    >
    > Is your point that it's better to call pgWalUsage = 0; after sending the
    > stats?
    
    Yes. At least there should be a comment explaining why it's done the way
    it is.
    
    
    
    > > 3) Doing if (memcmp(&WalStats, &all_zeroes, sizeof(PgStat_MsgWal)) == 0)
    > >    just to figure out if there's been any changes isn't all that
    > >    cheap. This is regularly exercised in read-only workloads too. Seems
    > >    adding a boolean WalStats.have_pending = true or such would be
    > >    better.
    >
    > I understood that for backends, this may leads performance degradation and
    > this problem is not only for the WalStats but also SLRUStats.
    >
    > I wondered the degradation is so big because pgstat_report_stat() checks if at
    > least PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL msec is passed since it last sent before check the
    > diff. If my understanding is correct, to get timestamp is more expensive.
    
    Getting a timestamp is expensive, yes. But I think we need to check for
    the no-pending-wal-stats *before* the clock check. See the below:
    
    
    > > 4) For plain backends pgstat_report_wal() is called by
    > >    pgstat_report_stat() - but it is not checked as part of the "Don't
    > >    expend a clock check if nothing to do" check at the top.  It's
    > >    probably rare to have pending wal stats without also passing one of
    > >    the other conditions, but ...
    >
    > (I'm not confidence my understanding of your comment is right.)
    > You mean that we need to expend a clock check in pgstat_report_wal()?
    > I think it's unnecessary because pgstat_report_stat() is already checked it.
    
    No, I mean that right now we might can erroneously return early
    pgstat_report_wal() for normal backends in some workloads:
    
    void
    pgstat_report_stat(bool disconnect)
    ...
    	/* Don't expend a clock check if nothing to do */
    	if ((pgStatTabList == NULL || pgStatTabList->tsa_used == 0) &&
    		pgStatXactCommit == 0 && pgStatXactRollback == 0 &&
    		!have_function_stats && !disconnect)
    		return;
    
    might return if there only is pending WAL activity. This needs to check
    whether there are pending WAL stats. Which in turn means that the check
    should be fast.
    
    Greetings,
    
    Andres Freund
    
    
    
    
  4. Re: wal stats questions

    Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com> — 2021-03-25T07:37:10Z

    At Wed, 24 Mar 2021 21:07:26 -0700, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote in 
    > Hi,
    > 
    > On 2021-03-25 10:51:56 +0900, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    > > On 2021/03/25 8:22, Andres Freund wrote:
    > > > 1) What is the motivation to have both prevWalUsage and pgWalUsage,
    > > >    instead of just accumulating the stats since the last submission?
    > > >    There doesn't seem to be any comment explaining it? Computing
    > > >    differences to previous values, and copying to prev*, isn't free. I
    > > >    assume this is out of a fear that the stats could get reset before
    > > >    they're used for instrument.c purposes - but who knows?
    > >
    > > Is your point that it's better to call pgWalUsage = 0; after sending the
    > > stats?
    > 
    > Yes. At least there should be a comment explaining why it's done the way
    > it is.
    
    pgWalUsage was used without resetting and we (I) thought that that
    behavior should be preserved.  On second thought, as Andres suggested,
    we can just reset pgWalUsage at sending since AFAICS no one takes
    difference crossing pgstat_report_stat() calls.
    
    > > > 3) Doing if (memcmp(&WalStats, &all_zeroes, sizeof(PgStat_MsgWal)) == 0)
    > > >    just to figure out if there's been any changes isn't all that
    > > >    cheap. This is regularly exercised in read-only workloads too. Seems
    > > >    adding a boolean WalStats.have_pending = true or such would be
    > > >    better.
    > >
    > > I understood that for backends, this may leads performance degradation and
    > > this problem is not only for the WalStats but also SLRUStats.
    > >
    > > I wondered the degradation is so big because pgstat_report_stat() checks if at
    > > least PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL msec is passed since it last sent before check the
    > > diff. If my understanding is correct, to get timestamp is more expensive.
    > 
    > Getting a timestamp is expensive, yes. But I think we need to check for
    > the no-pending-wal-stats *before* the clock check. See the below:
    > 
    > 
    > > > 4) For plain backends pgstat_report_wal() is called by
    > > >    pgstat_report_stat() - but it is not checked as part of the "Don't
    > > >    expend a clock check if nothing to do" check at the top.  It's
    > > >    probably rare to have pending wal stats without also passing one of
    > > >    the other conditions, but ...
    > >
    > > (I'm not confidence my understanding of your comment is right.)
    > > You mean that we need to expend a clock check in pgstat_report_wal()?
    > > I think it's unnecessary because pgstat_report_stat() is already checked it.
    > 
    > No, I mean that right now we might can erroneously return early
    > pgstat_report_wal() for normal backends in some workloads:
    > 
    > void
    > pgstat_report_stat(bool disconnect)
    > ...
    > 	/* Don't expend a clock check if nothing to do */
    > 	if ((pgStatTabList == NULL || pgStatTabList->tsa_used == 0) &&
    > 		pgStatXactCommit == 0 && pgStatXactRollback == 0 &&
    > 		!have_function_stats && !disconnect)
    > 		return;
    > 
    > might return if there only is pending WAL activity. This needs to check
    > whether there are pending WAL stats. Which in turn means that the check
    > should be fast.
    
    Agreed that the condition is wrong.  On the other hand, the counters
    are incremented in XLogInsertRecord() and I think we don't want add
    instructions there.
    
    If any wal activity has been recorded, wal_records is always positive
    thus we can check for wal activity just by "pgWalUsage.wal_records >
    0, which should be fast enough.
    
    regards.
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  5. Re: wal stats questions

    Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-03-25T10:01:23Z

    
    On 2021/03/25 16:37, Kyotaro Horiguchi wrote:
    > At Wed, 24 Mar 2021 21:07:26 -0700, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote in
    >> Hi,
    >>
    >> On 2021-03-25 10:51:56 +0900, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    >>> On 2021/03/25 8:22, Andres Freund wrote:
    >>>> 1) What is the motivation to have both prevWalUsage and pgWalUsage,
    >>>>     instead of just accumulating the stats since the last submission?
    >>>>     There doesn't seem to be any comment explaining it? Computing
    >>>>     differences to previous values, and copying to prev*, isn't free. I
    >>>>     assume this is out of a fear that the stats could get reset before
    >>>>     they're used for instrument.c purposes - but who knows?
    >>>
    >>> Is your point that it's better to call pgWalUsage = 0; after sending the
    >>> stats?
    >>
    >> Yes. At least there should be a comment explaining why it's done the way
    >> it is.
    > 
    > pgWalUsage was used without resetting and we (I) thought that that
    > behavior should be preserved.  On second thought, as Andres suggested,
    > we can just reset pgWalUsage at sending since AFAICS no one takes
    > difference crossing pgstat_report_stat() calls.
    
    Yes, I agree that we can do that since there seems no such code for now.
    Also if we do that, we can check, for example "pgWalUsage.wal_records > 0"
    as you suggested, to easily determine whether there is pending WAL stats or not.
    Anyway I agree it's better to add comments about the design more.
    
    
    >>>> 3) Doing if (memcmp(&WalStats, &all_zeroes, sizeof(PgStat_MsgWal)) == 0)
    >>>>     just to figure out if there's been any changes isn't all that
    >>>>     cheap. This is regularly exercised in read-only workloads too. Seems
    >>>>     adding a boolean WalStats.have_pending = true or such would be
    >>>>     better.
    >>>
    >>> I understood that for backends, this may leads performance degradation and
    >>> this problem is not only for the WalStats but also SLRUStats.
    >>>
    >>> I wondered the degradation is so big because pgstat_report_stat() checks if at
    >>> least PGSTAT_STAT_INTERVAL msec is passed since it last sent before check the
    >>> diff. If my understanding is correct, to get timestamp is more expensive.
    >>
    >> Getting a timestamp is expensive, yes. But I think we need to check for
    >> the no-pending-wal-stats *before* the clock check. See the below:
    >>
    >>
    >>>> 4) For plain backends pgstat_report_wal() is called by
    >>>>     pgstat_report_stat() - but it is not checked as part of the "Don't
    >>>>     expend a clock check if nothing to do" check at the top.  It's
    >>>>     probably rare to have pending wal stats without also passing one of
    >>>>     the other conditions, but ...
    >>>
    >>> (I'm not confidence my understanding of your comment is right.)
    >>> You mean that we need to expend a clock check in pgstat_report_wal()?
    >>> I think it's unnecessary because pgstat_report_stat() is already checked it.
    >>
    >> No, I mean that right now we might can erroneously return early
    >> pgstat_report_wal() for normal backends in some workloads:
    >>
    >> void
    >> pgstat_report_stat(bool disconnect)
    >> ...
    >> 	/* Don't expend a clock check if nothing to do */
    >> 	if ((pgStatTabList == NULL || pgStatTabList->tsa_used == 0) &&
    >> 		pgStatXactCommit == 0 && pgStatXactRollback == 0 &&
    >> 		!have_function_stats && !disconnect)
    >> 		return;
    >>
    >> might return if there only is pending WAL activity. This needs to check
    >> whether there are pending WAL stats. Which in turn means that the check
    >> should be fast.
    > 
    > Agreed that the condition is wrong.  On the other hand, the counters
    > are incremented in XLogInsertRecord() and I think we don't want add
    > instructions there.
    
    Basically yes. We should avoid that especially while WALInsertLock is being hold.
    But it's not so harmful to do that after the lock is released?
    
    > If any wal activity has been recorded, wal_records is always positive
    > thus we can check for wal activity just by "pgWalUsage.wal_records >
    > 0, which should be fast enough.
    
    Maybe there is the case where a backend generates no WAL records,
    but just writes them because it needs to do write-ahead-logging
    when flush the table data? If yes, "pgWalUsage.wal_records > 0" is not enough.
    Probably other fields also need to be checked.
    
    Regards,
    
    -- 
    Fujii Masao
    Advanced Computing Technology Center
    Research and Development Headquarters
    NTT DATA CORPORATION
    
    
    
    
  6. Re: wal stats questions

    Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com> — 2021-03-26T01:08:28Z

    At Thu, 25 Mar 2021 19:01:23 +0900, Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com> wrote in 
    > On 2021/03/25 16:37, Kyotaro Horiguchi wrote:
    > > pgWalUsage was used without resetting and we (I) thought that that
    > > behavior should be preserved.  On second thought, as Andres suggested,
    > > we can just reset pgWalUsage at sending since AFAICS no one takes
    > > difference crossing pgstat_report_stat() calls.
    > 
    > Yes, I agree that we can do that since there seems no such code for
    > now.
    > Also if we do that, we can check, for example "pgWalUsage.wal_records
    > > 0"
    > as you suggested, to easily determine whether there is pending WAL
    > stats or not.
    > Anyway I agree it's better to add comments about the design more.
    ...
    > > If any wal activity has been recorded, wal_records is always positive
    > > thus we can check for wal activity just by "pgWalUsage.wal_records >
    > > 0, which should be fast enough.
    > 
    > Maybe there is the case where a backend generates no WAL records,
    > but just writes them because it needs to do write-ahead-logging
    > when flush the table data? If yes, "pgWalUsage.wal_records > 0" is not
    > enough.
    > Probably other fields also need to be checked.
    
    (I noticed I made the discussion above unconsciously premising
    pgWalUsage reset.)
    
    I may be misunderstanding or missing something, but the only place
    where pgWalUsage counters are increased is XLogInsertRecrod.  That is,
    pgWalUsage counts wal insertions, not writes nor flushes.  AFAICS
    pgWalUsage.wal_records is always incremented when other counters are
    increased.  Looking from another side, we should refrain from adding
    counters that incrases at a different time than
    pgWalUsage.wal_recrods. (That should be written as a comment there.)
    
    regards.
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  7. Re: wal stats questions

    Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-03-26T01:32:23Z

    
    On 2021/03/26 10:08, Kyotaro Horiguchi wrote:
    > At Thu, 25 Mar 2021 19:01:23 +0900, Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com> wrote in
    >> On 2021/03/25 16:37, Kyotaro Horiguchi wrote:
    >>> pgWalUsage was used without resetting and we (I) thought that that
    >>> behavior should be preserved.  On second thought, as Andres suggested,
    >>> we can just reset pgWalUsage at sending since AFAICS no one takes
    >>> difference crossing pgstat_report_stat() calls.
    >>
    >> Yes, I agree that we can do that since there seems no such code for
    >> now.
    >> Also if we do that, we can check, for example "pgWalUsage.wal_records
    >>> 0"
    >> as you suggested, to easily determine whether there is pending WAL
    >> stats or not.
    >> Anyway I agree it's better to add comments about the design more.
    > ...
    >>> If any wal activity has been recorded, wal_records is always positive
    >>> thus we can check for wal activity just by "pgWalUsage.wal_records >
    >>> 0, which should be fast enough.
    >>
    >> Maybe there is the case where a backend generates no WAL records,
    >> but just writes them because it needs to do write-ahead-logging
    >> when flush the table data? If yes, "pgWalUsage.wal_records > 0" is not
    >> enough.
    >> Probably other fields also need to be checked.
    > 
    > (I noticed I made the discussion above unconsciously premising
    > pgWalUsage reset.)
    > 
    > I may be misunderstanding or missing something, but the only place
    > where pgWalUsage counters are increased is XLogInsertRecrod.  That is,
    > pgWalUsage counts wal insertions, not writes nor flushes.  AFAICS
    
    Yes. And WalStats instead of pgWalUsage includes the stats about
    not only WAL insertions, but also writes and flushes.
    pgstat_send_wal() checks WalStats to determine whether there are
    pending WAL stats to send to the stats collector or not. That is,
    the counters of not only WAL insertions but also writes and flushes
    should be checked to determine whether there are pending stats or not, I think..
    
    Regards,
    
    -- 
    Fujii Masao
    Advanced Computing Technology Center
    Research and Development Headquarters
    NTT DATA CORPORATION
    
    
    
    
  8. Re: wal stats questions

    Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com> — 2021-03-26T03:47:49Z

    At Fri, 26 Mar 2021 10:32:23 +0900, Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com> wrote in 
    > > I may be misunderstanding or missing something, but the only place
    > > where pgWalUsage counters are increased is XLogInsertRecrod.  That is,
    > > pgWalUsage counts wal insertions, not writes nor flushes.  AFAICS
    > 
    > Yes. And WalStats instead of pgWalUsage includes the stats about
    > not only WAL insertions, but also writes and flushes.
    
    Ugh! I was missing a very large blob.. Ok, we need additional check
    for non-pgWalUsage part. Sorry.
    
    > pgstat_send_wal() checks WalStats to determine whether there are
    > pending WAL stats to send to the stats collector or not. That is,
    > the counters of not only WAL insertions but also writes and flushes
    > should be checked to determine whether there are pending stats or not,
    > I think..
    
    I think we may have an additional flag to notify about io-stat part,
    in constrast to wal-insertion part . Anyway we do additional
    INSTR_TIME_SET_CURRENT when track_wal_io_timinge.
    
    regards.
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  9. Re: wal stats questions

    Masahiro Ikeda <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-03-26T07:20:04Z

    Thanks for many your suggestions!
    I made the patch to handle the issues.
    
    > 1) What is the motivation to have both prevWalUsage and pgWalUsage,
    >    instead of just accumulating the stats since the last submission?
    >    There doesn't seem to be any comment explaining it? Computing
    >    differences to previous values, and copying to prev*, isn't free. I
    >    assume this is out of a fear that the stats could get reset before
    >    they're used for instrument.c purposes - but who knows?
    
    I removed the unnecessary code copying pgWalUsage and just reset the
    pgWalUsage after reporting the stats in pgstat_report_wal().
    
    
    > 2) Why is there both pgstat_send_wal() and pgstat_report_wal()? With the
    >    former being used by wal writer, the latter by most other processes?
    >    There again don't seem to be comments explaining this.
    
    I added the comments why two functions are separated.
    (But is it better to merge them?)
    
    
    > 3) Doing if (memcmp(&WalStats, &all_zeroes, sizeof(PgStat_MsgWal)) == 0)
    >    just to figure out if there's been any changes isn't all that
    >    cheap. This is regularly exercised in read-only workloads too. Seems
    >    adding a boolean WalStats.have_pending = true or such would be
    >    better.
    > 4) For plain backends pgstat_report_wal() is called by
    >    pgstat_report_stat() - but it is not checked as part of the "Don't
    >    expend a clock check if nothing to do" check at the top.  It's
    >    probably rare to have pending wal stats without also passing one of
    >    the other conditions, but ...
    
    I added the logic to check if the stats counters are updated or not in
    pgstat_report_stat() using not only generated wal record but also write/sync
    counters, and it can skip to call reporting function.
    
    Although I added the condition which the write/sync counters are updated or
    not, I haven't understood the following case yet...Sorry. I checked related
    code and tested to insert large object, but I couldn't. I'll investigate more
    deeply, but if you already know the function which leads the following case,
    please let me know.
    
    > Maybe there is the case where a backend generates no WAL records,
    > but just writes them because it needs to do write-ahead-logging
    > when flush the table data?
    
    > Ugh! I was missing a very large blob.. Ok, we need additional check
    > for non-pgWalUsage part. Sorry.
    
    
    Regards,
    
    -- 
    Masahiro Ikeda
    NTT DATA CORPORATION
    
  10. Re: wal stats questions

    Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2021-03-26T17:07:45Z

    Hi,
    
    On 2021-03-25 16:37:10 +0900, Kyotaro Horiguchi wrote:
    > On the other hand, the counters are incremented in XLogInsertRecord()
    > and I think we don't want add instructions there.
    
    I don't really buy this. Setting a boolean to true, in a cacheline
    you're already touching, isn't that much compared to all the other stuff
    in there. The branch to check if wal stats timing etc is enabled is much
    more expensive.  I think we should just set a boolean to true and leave
    it at that.
    
    Greetings,
    
    Andres Freund
    
    
    
    
  11. Re: wal stats questions

    Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com> — 2021-03-29T02:09:00Z

    At Fri, 26 Mar 2021 10:07:45 -0700, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote in 
    > Hi,
    > 
    > On 2021-03-25 16:37:10 +0900, Kyotaro Horiguchi wrote:
    > > On the other hand, the counters are incremented in XLogInsertRecord()
    > > and I think we don't want add instructions there.
    > 
    > I don't really buy this. Setting a boolean to true, in a cacheline
    > you're already touching, isn't that much compared to all the other stuff
    > in there. The branch to check if wal stats timing etc is enabled is much
    > more expensive.  I think we should just set a boolean to true and leave
    > it at that.
    
    Hmm. Yes, I agree to you in that opinion.  I (remember I) was told not
    to add even a cycle to the hot path as far as we can avoid when I
    tried something like that.
    
    So I'm happy to +1 for that if it is the consensus here, since it is
    cleaner.
    
    regards.
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  12. Re: wal stats questions

    Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com> — 2021-03-29T02:11:00Z

    At Mon, 29 Mar 2021 11:09:00 +0900 (JST), Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com> wrote in 
    > At Fri, 26 Mar 2021 10:07:45 -0700, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote in 
    > > Hi,
    > > 
    > > On 2021-03-25 16:37:10 +0900, Kyotaro Horiguchi wrote:
    > > > On the other hand, the counters are incremented in XLogInsertRecord()
    > > > and I think we don't want add instructions there.
    > > 
    > > I don't really buy this. Setting a boolean to true, in a cacheline
    > > you're already touching, isn't that much compared to all the other stuff
    > > in there. The branch to check if wal stats timing etc is enabled is much
    > > more expensive.  I think we should just set a boolean to true and leave
    > > it at that.
    > 
    > Hmm. Yes, I agree to you in that opinion.  I (remember I) was told not
    
    It might sound differently.. To be precise, "I had the same opinion
    with you".
    
    > to add even a cycle to the hot path as far as we can avoid when I
    > tried something like that.
    > 
    > So I'm happy to +1 for that if it is the consensus here, since it is
    > cleaner.
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  13. Re: wal stats questions

    Masahiro Ikeda <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-03-30T00:41:24Z

    I update the patch since there were my misunderstanding points.
    
    On 2021/03/26 16:20, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    > Thanks for many your suggestions!
    > I made the patch to handle the issues.
    > 
    >> 1) What is the motivation to have both prevWalUsage and pgWalUsage,
    >>    instead of just accumulating the stats since the last submission?
    >>    There doesn't seem to be any comment explaining it? Computing
    >>    differences to previous values, and copying to prev*, isn't free. I
    >>    assume this is out of a fear that the stats could get reset before
    >>    they're used for instrument.c purposes - but who knows?
    > 
    > I removed the unnecessary code copying pgWalUsage and just reset the
    > pgWalUsage after reporting the stats in pgstat_report_wal().
    
    I didn't change this.
    
    >> 2) Why is there both pgstat_send_wal() and pgstat_report_wal()? With the
    >>    former being used by wal writer, the latter by most other processes?
    >>    There again don't seem to be comments explaining this.
    > 
    > I added the comments why two functions are separated.
    > (But is it better to merge them?)
    
    I updated the comments for following reasons.
    
    
    >> 3) Doing if (memcmp(&WalStats, &all_zeroes, sizeof(PgStat_MsgWal)) == 0)
    >>    just to figure out if there's been any changes isn't all that
    >>    cheap. This is regularly exercised in read-only workloads too. Seems
    >>    adding a boolean WalStats.have_pending = true or such would be
    >>    better.
    >> 4) For plain backends pgstat_report_wal() is called by
    >>    pgstat_report_stat() - but it is not checked as part of the "Don't
    >>    expend a clock check if nothing to do" check at the top.  It's
    >>    probably rare to have pending wal stats without also passing one of
    >>    the other conditions, but ...
    > 
    > I added the logic to check if the stats counters are updated or not in
    > pgstat_report_stat() using not only generated wal record but also write/sync
    > counters, and it can skip to call reporting function.
    
    I removed the checking code whether the wal stats counters were updated or not
    in pgstat_report_stat() since I couldn't understand the valid case yet.
    pgstat_report_stat() is called by backends when the transaction is finished.
    This means that the condition seems always pass.
    
    I thought to implement if the WAL stats counters were not updated, skip to
    send all statistics including the counters for databases and so on. But I
    think it's not good because it may take more time to be reflected the
    generated stats by read-only transaction.
    
    
    > Although I added the condition which the write/sync counters are updated or
    > not, I haven't understood the following case yet...Sorry. I checked related
    > code and tested to insert large object, but I couldn't. I'll investigate more
    > deeply, but if you already know the function which leads the following case,
    > please let me know.
    
    I understood the above case (Fujii-san, thanks for your advice in person).
    When to flush buffers, for example, to select buffer replacement victim,
    it requires a WAL flush if the buffer is dirty. So, to check the WAL stats
    counters are updated or not, I check the number of generated wal record and
    the counter of syncing in pgstat_report_wal().
    
    The reason why not to check the counter of writing is that if to write is
    happened, to sync is happened too in the above case. I added the comments in
    the patch.
    
    Regards,
    -- 
    Masahiro Ikeda
    NTT DATA CORPORATION
    
  14. Re: wal stats questions

    Kyotaro Horiguchi <horikyota.ntt@gmail.com> — 2021-03-30T08:28:43Z

    At Tue, 30 Mar 2021 09:41:24 +0900, Masahiro Ikeda <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com> wrote in 
    > I update the patch since there were my misunderstanding points.
    > 
    > On 2021/03/26 16:20, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    > > Thanks for many your suggestions!
    > > I made the patch to handle the issues.
    > > 
    > >> 1) What is the motivation to have both prevWalUsage and pgWalUsage,
    > >>    instead of just accumulating the stats since the last submission?
    > >>    There doesn't seem to be any comment explaining it? Computing
    > >>    differences to previous values, and copying to prev*, isn't free. I
    > >>    assume this is out of a fear that the stats could get reset before
    > >>    they're used for instrument.c purposes - but who knows?
    > > 
    > > I removed the unnecessary code copying pgWalUsage and just reset the
    > > pgWalUsage after reporting the stats in pgstat_report_wal().
    > 
    > I didn't change this.
    > 
    > >> 2) Why is there both pgstat_send_wal() and pgstat_report_wal()? With the
    > >>    former being used by wal writer, the latter by most other processes?
    > >>    There again don't seem to be comments explaining this.
    > > 
    > > I added the comments why two functions are separated.
    > > (But is it better to merge them?)
    > 
    > I updated the comments for following reasons.
    > 
    > 
    > >> 3) Doing if (memcmp(&WalStats, &all_zeroes, sizeof(PgStat_MsgWal)) == 0)
    > >>    just to figure out if there's been any changes isn't all that
    > >>    cheap. This is regularly exercised in read-only workloads too. Seems
    > >>    adding a boolean WalStats.have_pending = true or such would be
    > >>    better.
    > >> 4) For plain backends pgstat_report_wal() is called by
    > >>    pgstat_report_stat() - but it is not checked as part of the "Don't
    > >>    expend a clock check if nothing to do" check at the top.  It's
    > >>    probably rare to have pending wal stats without also passing one of
    > >>    the other conditions, but ...
    > > 
    > > I added the logic to check if the stats counters are updated or not in
    > > pgstat_report_stat() using not only generated wal record but also write/sync
    > > counters, and it can skip to call reporting function.
    > 
    > I removed the checking code whether the wal stats counters were updated or not
    > in pgstat_report_stat() since I couldn't understand the valid case yet.
    > pgstat_report_stat() is called by backends when the transaction is finished.
    > This means that the condition seems always pass.
    
    Doesn't the same holds for all other counters?  If you are saying that
    "wal counters should be zero if all other stats counters are zero", we
    need an assertion to check that and a comment to explain that.
    
    I personally find it safer to add the WAL-stats condition to the
    fast-return check, rather than addin such assertion.
    
    pgstat_send_wal() is called mainly from pgstat_report_wal() which
    consumes pgWalStats counters and WalWriterMain() which
    doesn't. Checking on pgWalStats counters isn't so complex that we need
    to avoid that in wal writer, thus *I* think pgstat_send_wal() and
    pgstat_report_wal() can be consolidated.  Even if you have a strong
    opinion that wal writer should call a separate function, the name
    should be something other than pgstat_send_wal() since it ignores
    pgWalUsage counters, which are supposed to be included in "WAL stats".
    
    
    > I thought to implement if the WAL stats counters were not updated, skip to
    > send all statistics including the counters for databases and so on. But I
    > think it's not good because it may take more time to be reflected the
    > generated stats by read-only transaction.
    
    Ur, yep.
    
    > > Although I added the condition which the write/sync counters are updated or
    > > not, I haven't understood the following case yet...Sorry. I checked related
    > > code and tested to insert large object, but I couldn't. I'll investigate more
    > > deeply, but if you already know the function which leads the following case,
    > > please let me know.
    > 
    > I understood the above case (Fujii-san, thanks for your advice in person).
    > When to flush buffers, for example, to select buffer replacement victim,
    > it requires a WAL flush if the buffer is dirty. So, to check the WAL stats
    > counters are updated or not, I check the number of generated wal record and
    > the counter of syncing in pgstat_report_wal().
    > 
    > The reason why not to check the counter of writing is that if to write is
    > happened, to sync is happened too in the above case. I added the comments in
    > the patch.
    
    Mmm..  Although I couldn't read you clearly, The fact that a flush may
    happen without a write means the reverse at the same time, a write may
    happen without a flush.  For asynchronous commits, WAL-write happens
    alone unaccompanied by a flush.  And the corresponding flush would
    happen later without writes.
    
    regards.
    
    -- 
    Kyotaro Horiguchi
    NTT Open Source Software Center
    
    
    
    
  15. Re: wal stats questions

    Masahiro Ikeda <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-03-30T11:37:36Z

    On 2021/03/30 17:28, Kyotaro Horiguchi wrote:
    > At Tue, 30 Mar 2021 09:41:24 +0900, Masahiro Ikeda <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com> wrote in 
    >> I update the patch since there were my misunderstanding points.
    >>
    >> On 2021/03/26 16:20, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    >>> Thanks for many your suggestions!
    >>> I made the patch to handle the issues.
    >>>
    >>>> 1) What is the motivation to have both prevWalUsage and pgWalUsage,
    >>>>    instead of just accumulating the stats since the last submission?
    >>>>    There doesn't seem to be any comment explaining it? Computing
    >>>>    differences to previous values, and copying to prev*, isn't free. I
    >>>>    assume this is out of a fear that the stats could get reset before
    >>>>    they're used for instrument.c purposes - but who knows?
    >>>
    >>> I removed the unnecessary code copying pgWalUsage and just reset the
    >>> pgWalUsage after reporting the stats in pgstat_report_wal().
    >>
    >> I didn't change this.
    >>
    >>>> 2) Why is there both pgstat_send_wal() and pgstat_report_wal()? With the
    >>>>    former being used by wal writer, the latter by most other processes?
    >>>>    There again don't seem to be comments explaining this.
    >>>
    >>> I added the comments why two functions are separated.
    >>> (But is it better to merge them?)
    >>
    >> I updated the comments for following reasons.
    >>
    >>
    >>>> 3) Doing if (memcmp(&WalStats, &all_zeroes, sizeof(PgStat_MsgWal)) == 0)
    >>>>    just to figure out if there's been any changes isn't all that
    >>>>    cheap. This is regularly exercised in read-only workloads too. Seems
    >>>>    adding a boolean WalStats.have_pending = true or such would be
    >>>>    better.
    >>>> 4) For plain backends pgstat_report_wal() is called by
    >>>>    pgstat_report_stat() - but it is not checked as part of the "Don't
    >>>>    expend a clock check if nothing to do" check at the top.  It's
    >>>>    probably rare to have pending wal stats without also passing one of
    >>>>    the other conditions, but ...
    >>>
    >>> I added the logic to check if the stats counters are updated or not in
    >>> pgstat_report_stat() using not only generated wal record but also write/sync
    >>> counters, and it can skip to call reporting function.
    >>
    >> I removed the checking code whether the wal stats counters were updated or not
    >> in pgstat_report_stat() since I couldn't understand the valid case yet.
    >> pgstat_report_stat() is called by backends when the transaction is finished.
    >> This means that the condition seems always pass.
    > 
    > Doesn't the same holds for all other counters?  If you are saying that
    > "wal counters should be zero if all other stats counters are zero", we
    > need an assertion to check that and a comment to explain that.
    > 
    > I personally find it safer to add the WAL-stats condition to the
    > fast-return check, rather than addin such assertion.
    Thanks for your comments.
    
    OK, I added the condition to the fast-return check. I noticed that I
    misunderstood that the purpose is to avoid expanding a clock check using WAL
    stats counters. But, the purpose is to make the conditions stricter, right?
    
    
    > pgstat_send_wal() is called mainly from pgstat_report_wal() which
    > consumes pgWalStats counters and WalWriterMain() which
    > doesn't. Checking on pgWalStats counters isn't so complex that we need
    > to avoid that in wal writer, thus *I* think pgstat_send_wal() and
    > pgstat_report_wal() can be consolidated.  Even if you have a strong
    > opinion that wal writer should call a separate function, the name
    > should be something other than pgstat_send_wal() since it ignores
    > pgWalUsage counters, which are supposed to be included in "WAL stats".
    
    OK, I consolidated them.
    
    
    
    >> I thought to implement if the WAL stats counters were not updated, skip to
    >> send all statistics including the counters for databases and so on. But I
    >> think it's not good because it may take more time to be reflected the
    >> generated stats by read-only transaction.
    > 
    > Ur, yep.
    > 
    >>> Although I added the condition which the write/sync counters are updated or
    >>> not, I haven't understood the following case yet...Sorry. I checked related
    >>> code and tested to insert large object, but I couldn't. I'll investigate more
    >>> deeply, but if you already know the function which leads the following case,
    >>> please let me know.
    >>
    >> I understood the above case (Fujii-san, thanks for your advice in person).
    >> When to flush buffers, for example, to select buffer replacement victim,
    >> it requires a WAL flush if the buffer is dirty. So, to check the WAL stats
    >> counters are updated or not, I check the number of generated wal record and
    >> the counter of syncing in pgstat_report_wal().
    >>
    >> The reason why not to check the counter of writing is that if to write is
    >> happened, to sync is happened too in the above case. I added the comments in
    >> the patch.
    > 
    > Mmm..  Although I couldn't read you clearly, The fact that a flush may
    > happen without a write means the reverse at the same time, a write may
    > happen without a flush.  For asynchronous commits, WAL-write happens
    > alone unaccompanied by a flush.  And the corresponding flush would
    > happen later without writes.
    
    Sorry, I didn't explain it enough.
    
    For processes which may generate WAL records like backends, I thought it's
    enough to check (1)the number of generated WAL records and (2)the counters of
    syncing(flushing) the WAL. This is checked in pgstat_report_wal(). Sorry for
    that I didn't mention (1) in the above thread.
    
    If a backend execute a write transaction, some WAL records must be generated.
    So, it's ok to check (1) only regardless of whether asynchronous commit is
    enabled or not.
    
    OHOT, if a backend execute a read-only transaction, WAL records won't be
    generated (although HOT makes a wal records exactly...). But, WAL-write and
    flush may happen when to flush buffers via XLogFlush(). In this case, if
    WAL-write happened, flush must be happen later. But, if my understanding is
    correct, there is no a case to flush doesn't happen, but to write happen.
    So, I thought (2) is needed and it's enough to check the counter of
    syncing(flushing).
    
    
    Regards,
    -- 
    Masahiro Ikeda
    NTT DATA CORPORATION
    
  16. Re: wal stats questions

    Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-04-13T00:33:12Z

    
    On 2021/03/30 20:37, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    > OK, I added the condition to the fast-return check. I noticed that I
    > misunderstood that the purpose is to avoid expanding a clock check using WAL
    > stats counters. But, the purpose is to make the conditions stricter, right?
    
    Yes. Currently if the following condition is false even when the WAL counters
    are updated, nothing is sent to the stats collector. But with your patch,
    in this case the WAL stats are sent.
    
    	if ((pgStatTabList == NULL || pgStatTabList->tsa_used == 0) &&
    		pgStatXactCommit == 0 && pgStatXactRollback == 0 &&
    		!have_function_stats && !disconnect)
    
    Thanks for the patch! It now fails to be applied to the master cleanly.
    So could you rebase the patch?
    
    pgstat_initialize() should initialize pgWalUsage with zero?
    
    +	/*
    +	 * set the counters related to generated WAL data.
    +	 */
    +	WalStats.m_wal_records = pgWalUsage.wal_records;
    +	WalStats.m_wal_fpi = pgWalUsage.wal_fpi;
    +	WalStats.m_wal_bytes = pgWalUsage.wal_bytes;
    
    This should be skipped if pgWalUsage.wal_records is zero?
    
    + * Be careful that the counters are cleared after reporting them to
    + * the stats collector although you can use WalUsageAccumDiff()
    + * to computing differences to previous values. For backends,
    + * the counters may be reset after a transaction is finished and
    + * pgstat_send_wal() is invoked, so you can compute the difference
    + * in the same transaction only.
    
    On the second thought, I'm afraid that this can be likely to be a foot-gun
    in the future. So I'm now wondering if the current approach (i.e., calculate
    the diff between the current and previous pgWalUsage and don't reset it
    to zero) is better. Thought? Since the similar data structure pgBufferUsage
    doesn't have this kind of restriction, I'm afraid that the developer can
    easily miss that only pgWalUsage has the restriction.
    
    But currently the diff is calculated (i.e., WalUsageAccumDiff() is called)
    even when the WAL counters are not updated. Then if that calculated diff is
    zero, we skip sending the WAL stats. This logic should be improved. That is,
    probably we should be able to check whether the WAL counters are updated
    or not, without calculating the diff, because the calculation is not free.
    We can implement this by introducing new flag variable that we discussed
    upthread. This flag is set to true whenever the WAL counters are incremented
    and used to determine whether the WAL stats need to be sent.
    
    If we do this, another issue is that the data types for wal_records and wal_fpi
    in pgWalUsage are long. Which may lead to overflow? If yes, it's should be
    replaced with uint64.
    
    Regards,
    
    -- 
    Fujii Masao
    Advanced Computing Technology Center
    Research and Development Headquarters
    NTT DATA CORPORATION
    
    
    
    
  17. Re: wal stats questions

    Masahiro Ikeda <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-04-16T01:27:11Z

    
    On 2021/04/13 9:33, Fujii Masao wrote:
    > 
    > 
    > On 2021/03/30 20:37, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    >> OK, I added the condition to the fast-return check. I noticed that I
    >> misunderstood that the purpose is to avoid expanding a clock check using WAL
    >> stats counters. But, the purpose is to make the conditions stricter, right?
    > 
    > Yes. Currently if the following condition is false even when the WAL counters
    > are updated, nothing is sent to the stats collector. But with your patch,
    > in this case the WAL stats are sent.
    > 
    >     if ((pgStatTabList == NULL || pgStatTabList->tsa_used == 0) &&
    >         pgStatXactCommit == 0 && pgStatXactRollback == 0 &&
    >         !have_function_stats && !disconnect)
    > 
    > Thanks for the patch! It now fails to be applied to the master cleanly.
    > So could you rebase the patch?
    
    Thanks for your comments!
    I rebased it.
    
    
    > pgstat_initialize() should initialize pgWalUsage with zero?
    
    Thanks. But, I didn't handle it because I undo the logic to calculate the diff
    as you mentioned below.
    
    
    > +    /*
    > +     * set the counters related to generated WAL data.
    > +     */
    > +    WalStats.m_wal_records = pgWalUsage.wal_records;
    > +    WalStats.m_wal_fpi = pgWalUsage.wal_fpi;
    > +    WalStats.m_wal_bytes = pgWalUsage.wal_bytes;
    > 
    > This should be skipped if pgWalUsage.wal_records is zero?
    
    Yes, fixed it.
    
    
    > + * Be careful that the counters are cleared after reporting them to
    > + * the stats collector although you can use WalUsageAccumDiff()
    > + * to computing differences to previous values. For backends,
    > + * the counters may be reset after a transaction is finished and
    > + * pgstat_send_wal() is invoked, so you can compute the difference
    > + * in the same transaction only.
    > 
    > On the second thought, I'm afraid that this can be likely to be a foot-gun
    > in the future. So I'm now wondering if the current approach (i.e., calculate
    > the diff between the current and previous pgWalUsage and don't reset it
    > to zero) is better. Thought? Since the similar data structure pgBufferUsage
    > doesn't have this kind of restriction, I'm afraid that the developer can
    > easily miss that only pgWalUsage has the restriction.
    > 
    > But currently the diff is calculated (i.e., WalUsageAccumDiff() is called)
    > even when the WAL counters are not updated. Then if that calculated diff is
    > zero, we skip sending the WAL stats. This logic should be improved. That is,
    > probably we should be able to check whether the WAL counters are updated
    > or not, without calculating the diff, because the calculation is not free.
    > We can implement this by introducing new flag variable that we discussed
    > upthread. This flag is set to true whenever the WAL counters are incremented
    > and used to determine whether the WAL stats need to be sent.
    
    Sound reasonable. I agreed that the restriction has a risk to lead mistakes.
    I made the patch introducing a new flag.
    
    - v4-0001-performance-improvements-of-reporting-wal-stats.patch
    
    
    I think introducing a new flag is not necessary because we can know if the WAL
    stats are updated or not using the counters of the generated wal record, wal
    writes and wal syncs. It's fast compared to get timestamp. The attached patch
    is to check if the counters are updated or not using them.
    
    -
    v4-0001-performance-improvements-of-reporting-wal-stats-without-introducing-a-new-variable.patch
    
    
    > If we do this, another issue is that the data types for wal_records and wal_fpi
    > in pgWalUsage are long. Which may lead to overflow? If yes, it's should be
    > replaced with uint64.
    
    Yes, I fixed. BufferUsage's counters have same issue, so I fixed them too.
    
    BTW, is it better to change PgStat_Counter from int64 to uint64 because there
    aren't any counters with negative number?
    
    Regards,
    -- 
    Masahiro Ikeda
    NTT DATA CORPORATION
    
    
  18. Re: wal stats questions

    torikoshia <torikoshia@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-04-21T06:08:48Z

    On 2021-04-16 10:27, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    > On 2021/04/13 9:33, Fujii Masao wrote:
    >> 
    >> 
    >> On 2021/03/30 20:37, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    >>> OK, I added the condition to the fast-return check. I noticed that I
    >>> misunderstood that the purpose is to avoid expanding a clock check 
    >>> using WAL
    >>> stats counters. But, the purpose is to make the conditions stricter, 
    >>> right?
    >> 
    >> Yes. Currently if the following condition is false even when the WAL 
    >> counters
    >> are updated, nothing is sent to the stats collector. But with your 
    >> patch,
    >> in this case the WAL stats are sent.
    >> 
    >>     if ((pgStatTabList == NULL || pgStatTabList->tsa_used == 0) &&
    >>         pgStatXactCommit == 0 && pgStatXactRollback == 0 &&
    >>         !have_function_stats && !disconnect)
    >> 
    >> Thanks for the patch! It now fails to be applied to the master 
    >> cleanly.
    >> So could you rebase the patch?
    > 
    > Thanks for your comments!
    > I rebased it.
    
    Thanks for working on this!
    
    I have some minor comments on 
    performance-improvements-of-reporting-wal-stats-without-introducing-a-new-variable.patch.
    
    
    177 @@ -3094,20 +3066,33 @@ pgstat_report_wal(void)
    178   * Return true if the message is sent, and false otherwise.
    
    Since you changed the return value to void, it seems the description is
    not necessary anymore.
    
    208 +        * generate wal records. 'wal_writes' and 'wal_sync' are 
    zero means the
    
    It may be better to change 'wal_writes' to 'wal_write' since single
    quotation seems to mean variable name.
    
    234 +        * set the counters related to generated WAL data if the 
    counters are
    
    
    set -> Set?
    
    
    Regards,
    
    
    
    
  19. Re: wal stats questions

    Masahiro Ikeda <ikedamsh@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-04-21T09:31:24Z

    
    On 2021/04/21 15:08, torikoshia wrote:
    > On 2021-04-16 10:27, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    >> On 2021/04/13 9:33, Fujii Masao wrote:
    >>> 
    >>> 
    >>> On 2021/03/30 20:37, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    >>>> OK, I added the condition to the fast-return check. I noticed that I 
    >>>> misunderstood that the purpose is to avoid expanding a clock check
    >>>> using WAL stats counters. But, the purpose is to make the conditions
    >>>> stricter, right?
    >>> 
    >>> Yes. Currently if the following condition is false even when the WAL
    >>> counters are updated, nothing is sent to the stats collector. But with
    >>> your patch, in this case the WAL stats are sent.
    >>> 
    >>> if ((pgStatTabList == NULL || pgStatTabList->tsa_used == 0) && 
    >>> pgStatXactCommit == 0 && pgStatXactRollback == 0 && 
    >>> !have_function_stats && !disconnect)
    >>> 
    >>> Thanks for the patch! It now fails to be applied to the master
    >>> cleanly. So could you rebase the patch?
    >> 
    >> Thanks for your comments! I rebased it.
    > 
    > Thanks for working on this!
    
    Hi, thanks for your comments!
    
    
    > I have some minor comments on 
    > performance-improvements-of-reporting-wal-stats-without-introducing-a-new-variable.patch.
    >
    > 
    > 
    > 
    > 177 @@ -3094,20 +3066,33 @@ pgstat_report_wal(void) 178   * Return true if
    > the message is sent, and false otherwise.
    > 
    > Since you changed the return value to void, it seems the description is not
    > necessary anymore.
    
    Right, I fixed it.
    
    
    > 208 +        * generate wal records. 'wal_writes' and 'wal_sync' are zero 
    > means the
    > 
    > It may be better to change 'wal_writes' to 'wal_write' since single 
    > quotation seems to mean variable name.
    
    Agreed.
    
    
    > 234 +        * set the counters related to generated WAL data if the
    > counters are
    > 
    > 
    > set -> Set?
    
    Yes, I fixed.
    
    > BTW, is it better to change PgStat_Counter from int64 to uint64 because> there aren't any counters with negative number?
    
    Although this is not related to torikoshi-san's comment, the above my
    understanding is not right. Some counters like delta_live_tuples,
    delta_dead_tuples and changed_tuples can be negative.
    
    
    Regards,
    -- 
    Masahiro Ikeda
    NTT DATA CORPORATION
    
  20. Re: wal stats questions

    Fujii Masao <masao.fujii@oss.nttdata.com> — 2021-04-22T13:42:14Z

    
    On 2021/04/21 18:31, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    >> BTW, is it better to change PgStat_Counter from int64 to uint64 because> there aren't any counters with negative number?
    
    On second thought, it's ok even if the counters like wal_records get overflowed.
    Because they are always used to calculate the diff between the previous and
    current counters. Even when the current counters are overflowed and
    the previous ones are not, WalUsageAccumDiff() seems to return the right
    diff of them. If this understanding is right, I'd withdraw my comment and
    it's ok to use "long" type for those counters. Thought?
    
    Regards,
    
    -- 
    Fujii Masao
    Advanced Computing Technology Center
    Research and Development Headquarters
    NTT DATA CORPORATION
    
    
    
    
  21. Re: wal stats questions

    Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2021-04-22T15:36:59Z

    Hi
    
    On Thu, Apr 22, 2021, at 06:42, Fujii Masao wrote:
    > 
    > 
    > On 2021/04/21 18:31, Masahiro Ikeda wrote:
    > >> BTW, is it better to change PgStat_Counter from int64 to uint64 because> there aren't any counters with negative number?
    > 
    > On second thought, it's ok even if the counters like wal_records get overflowed.
    > Because they are always used to calculate the diff between the previous and
    > current counters. Even when the current counters are overflowed and
    > the previous ones are not, WalUsageAccumDiff() seems to return the right
    > diff of them. If this understanding is right, I'd withdraw my comment and
    > it's ok to use "long" type for those counters. Thought?
    
    Why long? It's of a platform dependent size, which doesn't seem useful here?
    
    Andres