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Reduce memory consumption for pending invalidation messages.
- 3aafc030a536 15.0 landed
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Reducing memory consumption for pending inval messages
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-05-30T17:22:56Z
I got interested in $SUBJECT as a result of the thread at [1]. It turns out that the existing implementation in inval.c is quite inefficient when a lot of individual commands each register just a few invalidations --- but a few invalidations per command is pretty typical. As an example, consider DO $do$ BEGIN FOR i IN 1..200000000 LOOP execute 'create function foo' || i || '() returns int language sql as $$select 1$$'; if (i % 100000 = 0) then raise notice '% loops done', i; end if; END LOOP; END $do$; Each CREATE FUNCTION registers three invalidation events, which minimally would require 48 bytes ... but the current code actually eats about 2kB per iteration, because we allocate a pair of new "chunks" for each command. The chunks themselves are intended to hold 32 entries which'd take 512 bytes --- but there's some overhead, causing aset.c to round up to 1024 bytes. Ouch. It gets worse though. If you wrap the commands in subtransactions: DO $do$ BEGIN FOR i IN 1..200000000 LOOP begin execute 'create function foo' || i || '() returns int language sql as $$select 1$$'; if (i % 100000 = 0) then raise notice '% loops done', i; end if; exception when division_by_zero then null; end; END LOOP; END $do$; the space consumption balloons to about 8kB per iteration, because the chunks are allocated in the per-subtransaction CurTransactionContext, which is given 8kB right off the bat. In common cases this'll be the *only* allocation in that context. We can do a lot better, by exploiting what we know about the usage patterns of invalidation requests. New requests are always added to the latest sublist, and the only management actions are (1) merge latest sublist into next-to-latest sublist, or (2) drop latest sublist, if a subtransaction aborts. This means we could perfectly well keep all the requests in a single, densely packed array in TopTransactionContext, and replace the "list" control structures with indexes into that array. The attached patch does that. I don't see any particular speed differential with this (unsurprising, since the other actions that an inval event logs and then triggers will surely swamp inval.c's management overhead). But the space consumption decreases gratifyingly. There is one notable new assumption I had to make for this. At end of a subtransaction, we have to merge its inval events into the "PriorCmd" list of the parent subtransaction. (It has to be the PriorCmd list, not the CurrentCmd list, because these events have already been processed locally; we don't want to do that again.) This means the parent's CurrentCmd list has to be empty at that instant, else we'd be trying to merge sublists that aren't adjacent in the array. As far as I can tell, this is always true: the patch's check for it doesn't trigger in a check-world run. And there's an argument that it must be true for semantic consistency (see comments in patch). So if that check ever fails, it probably means there is a missing CommandCounterIncrement somewhere. Still, this could use more review and testing. BTW, I noted with some amusement that this comment in xactGetCommittedInvalidationMessages: * ... Maintain the order that they * would be processed in by AtEOXact_Inval(), to ensure emulated behaviour * in redo is as similar as possible to original. We want the same bugs, * if any, not new ones. is making a claim that the existing code there actually does not satisfy. In particular it fails to maintain the correct ordering of catcache vs. relcache events. The patch fixes that, but I wonder whether there is anything we need to do in the back branches. I'm inclined to think that it doesn't matter beyond the small efficiency risk inherent in doing (some) relcache flushes before catcache flushes. The code already says that the order of events within any one list isn't supposed to matter. Anyway, I'll add this to the next CF. regards, tom lane [1] https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/88986113-6b01-452b-89d0-9492b6a79e33%40www.fastmail.com -
Re: Reducing memory consumption for pending inval messages
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-07-13T20:21:40Z
I wrote: > It turns out that the existing implementation in inval.c is quite > inefficient when a lot of individual commands each register just > a few invalidations --- but a few invalidations per command is > pretty typical. Per the cfbot, here's a rebase over 3788c6678 (actually just undoing its effects on inval.c, since that code is removed here). regards, tom lane
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Re: Reducing memory consumption for pending inval messages
Nathan Bossart <bossartn@amazon.com> — 2021-08-16T20:14:25Z
On 5/30/21, 10:22 AM, "Tom Lane" <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > We can do a lot better, by exploiting what we know about the usage > patterns of invalidation requests. New requests are always added to > the latest sublist, and the only management actions are (1) merge > latest sublist into next-to-latest sublist, or (2) drop latest > sublist, if a subtransaction aborts. This means we could perfectly > well keep all the requests in a single, densely packed array in > TopTransactionContext, and replace the "list" control structures > with indexes into that array. The attached patch does that. I spent some time looking through this patch, and it seems reasonable to me. > There is one notable new assumption I had to make for this. At end > of a subtransaction, we have to merge its inval events into the > "PriorCmd" list of the parent subtransaction. (It has to be the > PriorCmd list, not the CurrentCmd list, because these events have > already been processed locally; we don't want to do that again.) > This means the parent's CurrentCmd list has to be empty at that > instant, else we'd be trying to merge sublists that aren't adjacent > in the array. As far as I can tell, this is always true: the patch's > check for it doesn't trigger in a check-world run. And there's an > argument that it must be true for semantic consistency (see comments > in patch). So if that check ever fails, it probably means there is a > missing CommandCounterIncrement somewhere. Still, this could use more > review and testing. I didn't discover any problems with this assumption in my testing, either. Perhaps it'd be good to commit something like this sooner in the v15 development cycle to maximize the amount of coverage it gets. Nathan
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Re: Reducing memory consumption for pending inval messages
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2021-08-16T20:18:12Z
"Bossart, Nathan" <bossartn@amazon.com> writes: > On 5/30/21, 10:22 AM, "Tom Lane" <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: >> We can do a lot better, by exploiting what we know about the usage >> patterns of invalidation requests. > I spent some time looking through this patch, and it seems reasonable > to me. Thanks for reviewing! >> There is one notable new assumption I had to make for this. At end >> of a subtransaction, we have to merge its inval events into the >> "PriorCmd" list of the parent subtransaction. (It has to be the >> PriorCmd list, not the CurrentCmd list, because these events have >> already been processed locally; we don't want to do that again.) >> This means the parent's CurrentCmd list has to be empty at that >> instant, else we'd be trying to merge sublists that aren't adjacent >> in the array. As far as I can tell, this is always true: the patch's >> check for it doesn't trigger in a check-world run. And there's an >> argument that it must be true for semantic consistency (see comments >> in patch). So if that check ever fails, it probably means there is a >> missing CommandCounterIncrement somewhere. Still, this could use more >> review and testing. > I didn't discover any problems with this assumption in my testing, > either. Perhaps it'd be good to commit something like this sooner in > the v15 development cycle to maximize the amount of coverage it gets. Yeah, that's a good point. I'll go push this. regards, tom lane