Thread
-
Re: Running update in chunks?
Kevin Grittner <kgrittn@mail.com> — 2013-01-21T19:06:03Z
Richard Huxton wrote: > The only differences I can think of are WAL logging (transaction > log) and index updates (the temp table has no indexes). What about foreign keys? Are there any tables which reference the updated column in a foreign key declaration? Do they have indexes on that column? -Kevin
-
Re: Running update in chunks?
Tim Uckun <timuckun@gmail.com> — 2013-01-21T20:09:31Z
Just to close this up and give some guidance to future googlers... There are no foreign keys. The table is empty when I start. I copy the data into it from a text file. Removing indexes didn't help much (made a very slight difference). running a query CREATE TEMP TABLE tt AS SELECT .... using a massive join takes about 8 seconds. I presume that's the baseline for the disk and RAM given my current postgres configuration. Note that this is not a satisfactory option for me because I can't do what I want in one step (the update I specified is one of many). running a very simple update "UPDATE imports set make_id = null" takes over 50 seconds so that's the minimum amount of time any update is going to take. Running a complex update where I join all the tables together and update all the fields takes about 106 seconds. Just running a complex select with the joins takes no time at all. I tried chunking the updates using chunks of 100 records and 1000 records (where ID between X and Y repeatedly) and it was even slower. Conclusion. Updates on postgres are slow (given the default postgresql.conf). I presume this is due to MVCC or the WAL or something and there are probably some things I can do to tweak the conf file to make them go faster but out of the box running an update on a table with lots of rows is going to cost you a lot. Removing the indexes doesn't help that much. Suggestion for the PG team. Deliver a more realistic postgres.conf by default. The default one seems to be aimed at ten year old PCs with very little RAM and disk space. At least deliver additional conf files for small, medium, large, huge setups.
-
Re: Running update in chunks?
Richard Huxton <dev@archonet.com> — 2013-01-21T21:23:50Z
On 21/01/13 20:09, Tim Uckun wrote: > Just to close this up and give some guidance to future googlers... Careful, future googlers. > Conclusion. Updates on postgres are slow Nope. > (given the default > postgresql.conf). I presume this is due to MVCC or the WAL or > something and there are probably some things I can do to tweak the > conf file to make them go faster but out of the box running an update > on a table with lots of rows is going to cost you a lot. Unlikely. Do you really think that a PostgreSQL installation typically runs 100 times slower on updates than inserts and every other user has just said "oh, that's ok then"? Or is it more likely that something peculiar is broken on your setup. > Removing the indexes doesn't help that much. > > Suggestion for the PG team. Deliver a more realistic postgres.conf by > default. The default one seems to be aimed at ten year old PCs with > very little RAM and disk space. At least deliver additional conf files > for small, medium, large, huge setups. -- Richard Huxton
-
Re: Running update in chunks?
patrick keshishian <pkeshish@gmail.com> — 2013-01-21T21:31:55Z
On Mon, Jan 21, 2013 at 1:23 PM, Richard Huxton <dev@archonet.com> wrote: > On 21/01/13 20:09, Tim Uckun wrote: >> >> Just to close this up and give some guidance to future googlers... > > Careful, future googlers. > >> Conclusion. Updates on postgres are slow > > Nope. > > >> (given the default >> postgresql.conf). I presume this is due to MVCC or the WAL or >> something and there are probably some things I can do to tweak the >> conf file to make them go faster but out of the box running an update >> on a table with lots of rows is going to cost you a lot. > > Unlikely. Do you really think that a PostgreSQL installation typically runs > 100 times slower on updates than inserts and every other user has just said > "oh, that's ok then"? Or is it more likely that something peculiar is broken > on your setup. > > >> Removing the indexes doesn't help that much. >> >> Suggestion for the PG team. Deliver a more realistic postgres.conf by >> default. The default one seems to be aimed at ten year old PCs with >> very little RAM and disk space. At least deliver additional conf files >> for small, medium, large, huge setups. I'd be curious to see results of the same "update" on a standard HDD vs the SSD, and maybe on a more typical database deployment hardware vs a macbook air. --patrick
-
Re: Running update in chunks?
Tim Uckun <timuckun@gmail.com> — 2013-01-21T21:45:24Z
> > Nope. If you have any suggestions I am all ears. For the purposes of this discussion we can narrow down the problem this update statement. Update imports set make_id = null. There are 98K records in the table. There is no index on the make_id field. Standard untouched postgresql.conf from the brew install of postgres. > Unlikely. Do you really think that a PostgreSQL installation typically runs > 100 times slower on updates than inserts and every other user has just said > "oh, that's ok then"? Or is it more likely that something peculiar is broken > on your setup. I really don't know. That's why I am here asking. I don't think anything particular is broken with my system. As mentioned above the setup is really simple. Standard postgres install, the default conf file, update one field on one table. It takes fifty plus seconds. I concede that if I was to go into the postgres.conf and make some changes it will probably run faster (maybe much faster) but I wanted to exhaust other factors before I went messing with the default install.
-
Re: Running update in chunks?
Tim Uckun <timuckun@gmail.com> — 2013-01-21T21:48:36Z
> I'd be curious to see results of the same "update" on a standard HDD > vs the SSD, and maybe on a more typical database deployment hardware > vs a macbook air. > I haven't tried it on any other machine yet. CREATE TEMP TABLE tt as SELECT ... takes eight seconds so presumably the disk is not the choke point.
-
Re: Running update in chunks?
patrick keshishian <pkeshish@gmail.com> — 2013-01-21T22:07:53Z
On Mon, Jan 21, 2013 at 1:48 PM, Tim Uckun <timuckun@gmail.com> wrote: >> I'd be curious to see results of the same "update" on a standard HDD >> vs the SSD, and maybe on a more typical database deployment hardware >> vs a macbook air. >> > > > I haven't tried it on any other machine yet. CREATE TEMP TABLE tt as > SELECT ... takes eight seconds so presumably the disk is not the > choke point. you are making an assumption that a fresh write is the same as a re-write. try the test. --patrick