Re: Potential Large Performance Gain in WAL synching

Greg Copeland <greg@copelandconsulting.net>

From: Greg Copeland <greg@CopelandConsulting.Net>
To: Neil Conway <neilc@samurai.com>
Cc: Curtis Faith <curtis@galtair.com>, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>, Pgsql-Hackers <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
Date: 2002-10-05T00:17:56Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
On Fri, 2002-10-04 at 18:03, Neil Conway wrote:
> "Curtis Faith" <curtis@galtair.com> writes:
> > It looks to me like BufferAlloc will simply result in a call to
> > BufferReplace > smgrblindwrt > write for md storage manager objects.
> > 
> > This means that a process will block while the write of dirty cache
> > buffers takes place.
> 
> I think Tom was suggesting that when a buffer is written out, the
> write() call only pushes the data down into the filesystem's buffer --
> which is free to then write the actual blocks to disk whenever it
> chooses to. In other words, the write() returns, the backend process
> can continue with what it was doing, and at some later time the blocks
> that we flushed from the Postgres buffer will actually be written to
> disk. So in some sense of the word, that I/O is asynchronous.


Isn't that true only as long as there is buffer space available?  When
there isn't buffer space available, seems the window for blocking comes
into play??  So I guess you could say it is optimally asynchronous and
worse case synchronous.  I think the worse case situation is one which
he's trying to address.

At least that's how I interpret it.

Greg