Re: Consecutive Query Executions with Increasing Execution Time
Laurenz Albe <laurenz.albe@cybertec.at>
From: Laurenz Albe <laurenz.albe@cybertec.at>
To: Jeff Janes <jeff.janes@gmail.com>
Cc: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>, Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie>, Shijia Wei <shijiawei@utexas.edu>, Pgsql Performance <pgsql-performance@lists.postgresql.org>
Date: 2019-12-18T12:17:10Z
Lists: pgsql-performance
On Tue, 2019-12-17 at 11:11 -0500, Jeff Janes wrote: > On Tue, Dec 17, 2019 at 8:08 AM Laurenz Albe <laurenz.albe@cybertec.at> wrote: > > On Mon, 2019-12-16 at 15:50 -0500, Tom Lane wrote: > > > Peter Geoghegan <pg@bowt.ie> writes: > > > > Why do the first and the twentieth executions of the query have almost > > > > identical "buffers shared/read" numbers? That seems odd. > > > > > > It's repeat execution of the same query, so that doesn't seem odd to me. > > > > Really? Shouldn't the blocks be in shared buffers after a couple > > of executions? > > If it is doing a seq scan (I don't know if it is) they intentionally use a > small ring buffer to, so they evict their own recently used blocks, rather > than evicting other people's blocks. So these blocks won't build up in > shared_buffers very rapidly just on the basis of repeated seq scans. Sure, but according to the execution plans it is doing a Parallel Index Only Scan. Yours, Laurenz Albe -- Cybertec | https://www.cybertec-postgresql.com