Thread
Commits
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psql: Fix \watch when using interval values less than 1ms
- 6331972c7bc9 16.5 landed
- 8a6170860c83 17.1 landed
- 9f34cae1426f 18.0 landed
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\watch 0 or \watch 0.00001 doesn't do what I want
Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> — 2024-10-09T13:38:56Z
Daniel's post [1] on \watch reminded me of this little issue I bumped into: I wanted to run a query in a tight loop, without any delay. I tried "\watch 0", but it didn't do what I wanted: postgres=# \watch 0 Wed 09 Oct 2024 16:34:19 EEST (every 1s) ?column? ---------- 1 (1 row) Wed 09 Oct 2024 16:34:20 EEST (every 1s) ?column? ---------- 1 (1 row) ^C Then I tried setting the delay really small, but that didn't do what I wanted either: postgres=# \watch 0.00001 Wed 09 Oct 2024 16:36:45 EEST (every 1e-05s) ?column? ---------- 1 (1 row) ^C It runs the query just once and then hangs forever, until I hit CTRL-C to cancel. [1] https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/B2FD26B4-8F64-4552-A603-5CC3DF1C7103%40yesql.se -- Heikki Linnakangas Neon (https://neon.tech) -
Re: \watch 0 or \watch 0.00001 doesn't do what I want
Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> — 2024-10-09T13:59:35Z
On 09/10/2024 16:38, Heikki Linnakangas wrote: > Daniel's post [1] on \watch reminded me of this little issue I bumped into: > > I wanted to run a query in a tight loop, without any delay. I tried > "\watch 0", but it didn't do what I wanted: > > postgres=# \watch 0 Correction: This changed in version 16. It works the way I expected on v16, but not in earlier versions. > Then I tried setting the delay really small, but that didn't do what I wanted either: > > postgres=# \watch 0.00001 > Wed 09 Oct 2024 16:36:45 EEST (every 1e-05s) > > ?column? > ---------- > 1 > (1 row) > > ^C > > It runs the query just once and then hangs forever, until I hit CTRL-C to cancel. This issue is present on newer versions still. -- Heikki Linnakangas Neon (https://neon.tech)
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Re: \watch 0 or \watch 0.00001 doesn't do what I want
Srinath Reddy Sadipiralla <srinath.reddy@zohocorp.com> — 2024-10-09T14:07:38Z
---- On Wed, 09 Oct 2024 19:08:56 +0530 Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> wrote --- Then I tried setting the delay really small, but that didn't do what I wanted either: postgres=# \watch 0.00001 Wed 09 Oct 2024 16:36:45 EEST (every 1e-05s) ?column? ---------- 1 (1 row) ^C It runs the query just once and then hangs forever, until I hit CTRL-C to cancel. hi heikki,but i am in pg 14.7 and the query is running perfectly without getting stuck. Regards, Srinath Reddy Sadipiralla Member Technical Staff ZOHO
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Re: \watch 0 or \watch 0.00001 doesn't do what I want
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2024-10-09T15:03:03Z
Heikki Linnakangas <hlinnaka@iki.fi> writes: > This issue is present on newer versions still. Here's the problem: long sleep_ms = (long) (sleep * 1000); If "sleep" is less than 0.0005, sleep_ms rounds to zero, which results in the subsequent setitimer disarming rather than arming the interrupt. There is an uncommented if (sleep == 0) continue; in the loop, which I bet some cowboy added to fix the zero-wait problem you complained of. But it's doing the wrong thing because it checks sleep not sleep_ms. We should change this to test sleep_ms, and we should probably fix the code that says what the wait interval is to print sleep_ms/1000.0 not sleep. And some more comments would be good. regards, tom lane
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Re: \watch 0 or \watch 0.00001 doesn't do what I want
Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2024-10-09T23:49:44Z
On Wed, Oct 09, 2024 at 11:03:03AM -0400, Tom Lane wrote: > in the loop, which I bet some cowboy added to fix the zero-wait > problem you complained of. But it's doing the wrong thing because > it checks sleep not sleep_ms. > > We should change this to test sleep_ms, and we should probably > fix the code that says what the wait interval is to print > sleep_ms/1000.0 not sleep. And some more comments would be good. Cowboy of 6f9ee74d45aa reporting for duty. This was not backpatched as of the reason written in the commit log. If folks would rather get the zero behavior backported, I'm OK with a more aggressive backpatch if that's the consensus. A cherry-pick of 6f9ee74d45aa down to v12 is clean enough, with a small conflict related to pagerpipe so it looks pretty much fine. Also, long is 4 bytes on Windows. Should we just use uint64 for sleep_ms? I am not sure that it is worth changing as it still gives plenty of maximum interval time even with sleep_ms in milliseconds. Anyway, I agree that this could be better for values with lower digits, even if \watch would output 0s when using an internal lower than 10^-3. How about something like the simple patch attached? -- Michael
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Re: \watch 0 or \watch 0.00001 doesn't do what I want
x4mmm@yandex-team.ru — 2024-10-10T05:47:25Z
> On 10 Oct 2024, at 04:49, Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> wrote: > > How about something like the simple patch attached? Let’s add a comment to tight-loop if statement. And a test for the case. Best regards, Andrey Borodin.
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Re: \watch 0 or \watch 0.00001 doesn't do what I want
Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2024-10-13T03:04:23Z
On Thu, Oct 10, 2024 at 10:47:25AM +0500, Andrey M. Borodin wrote: > Let’s add a comment to tight-loop if statement. And a test for the case. + /* Tight loop, no wait needed */ + if (sleep_ms == 0) Okay about this addition. +psql_like($node, sprintf('SELECT 1 \watch c=3 i=%g', 0.0001), + qr/1\n1\n1/, '\watch with 3 iterations'); And I am fine with this addition as well, for the sleep_ms == 0 case. -- Michael -
Re: \watch 0 or \watch 0.00001 doesn't do what I want
Michael Paquier <michael@paquier.xyz> — 2024-10-14T03:29:31Z
On Sun, Oct 13, 2024 at 12:04:23PM +0900, Michael Paquier wrote: > + /* Tight loop, no wait needed */ > + if (sleep_ms == 0) > > Okay about this addition. > > +psql_like($node, sprintf('SELECT 1 \watch c=3 i=%g', 0.0001), > + qr/1\n1\n1/, '\watch with 3 iterations'); > > And I am fine with this addition as well, for the sleep_ms == 0 case. I have done an extra lookup, tweaked a few things, and backpatched that down to v16. -- Michael