Thread
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pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Gregory Stark <stark@postgresql.org> — 2010-02-15T00:50:57Z
Log Message: ----------- Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after copying all the data and using posix_fadvise to nudge the OS into flushing it earlier. This also hopefully makes CREATE DATABASE avoid spamming the cache. Tests show a big speedup on Linux at least on some filesystems. Idea and patch from Andres Freund. Modified Files: -------------- pgsql/src/backend/storage/file: fd.c (r1.153 -> r1.154) (http://anoncvs.postgresql.org/cvsweb.cgi/pgsql/src/backend/storage/file/fd.c?r1=1.153&r2=1.154) pgsql/src/include/storage: fd.h (r1.66 -> r1.67) (http://anoncvs.postgresql.org/cvsweb.cgi/pgsql/src/include/storage/fd.h?r1=1.66&r2=1.67) pgsql/src/port: copydir.c (r1.25 -> r1.26) (http://anoncvs.postgresql.org/cvsweb.cgi/pgsql/src/port/copydir.c?r1=1.25&r2=1.26) -
Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2010-02-15T06:57:19Z
stark@postgresql.org (Greg Stark) writes: > Log Message: > ----------- > Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after copying > all the data and using posix_fadvise to nudge the OS into flushing it > earlier. This also hopefully makes CREATE DATABASE avoid spamming the > cache. The buildfarm indicates that this patch has got some serious issues. regards, tom lane
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2010-02-15T07:13:32Z
I wrote: > The buildfarm indicates that this patch has got some serious issues. Actually, looking closer, some of the Windows machines started failing after the *earlier* patch to add directory fsyncs. regards, tom lane
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2010-02-15T08:36:31Z
On Monday 15 February 2010 08:13:32 Tom Lane wrote: > I wrote: > > The buildfarm indicates that this patch has got some serious issues. > > Actually, looking closer, some of the Windows machines started failing > after the *earlier* patch to add directory fsyncs. And not only the windows machines. Seems sensible to add a configure check whether directory-fsyncing works. But at least I am not capable of writing good m4/configure.in/whatever without strong supervision... Will try if nobody else with more knowledge does and if somebody will look over it afterwards. Andres
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Marcin Mańk <marcin.mank@gmail.com> — 2010-02-15T09:36:40Z
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 9:36 AM, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > On Monday 15 February 2010 08:13:32 Tom Lane wrote: >> Actually, looking closer, some of the Windows machines started failing >> after the *earlier* patch to add directory fsyncs. > And not only the windows machines. Seems sensible to add a configure check > whether directory-fsyncing works. It looks like a thing that can be filesystem-dependent. Maybe a kind of runtime check? Greetings Marcin Mańk
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2010-02-15T10:02:50Z
Hi Marcin, Sounds rather unlikely to me. Its likely handled at an upper layer (vfs in linux' case) and only overloaded when an optimized implementation is available. Which os do you see implementing that only on a part of the filesystems? A runtime check would be creating, fsyncing and deleting a directory for every directory youre fsyncing because they could be on a different fs... Andres -- Sent from a mobile phone - please excuse brevity and formatting. ----- Ursprüngliche Mitteilung ----- > On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 9:36 AM, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > > On Monday 15 February 2010 08:13:32 Tom Lane wrote: > > > Actually, looking closer, some of the Windows machines started failing > > > after the *earlier* patch to add directory fsyncs. > > And not only the windows machines. Seems sensible to add a configure check > > whether directory-fsyncing works. > > It looks like a thing that can be filesystem-dependent. Maybe a kind > of runtime check? > > Greetings > Marcin Mańk > > -- > Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) > To make changes to your subscription: > http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Greg Stark <stark@mit.edu> — 2010-02-15T11:19:24Z
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 10:02 AM, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > Hi Marcin, > > Sounds rather unlikely to me. Its likely handled at an upper layer (vfs in linux' case) and only overloaded when an optimized implementation is available. > Which os do you see implementing that only on a part of the filesystems? > > A runtime check would be creating, fsyncing and deleting a directory for every directory youre fsyncing because they could be on a different fs... We could just not check the result code of the fsync. Or print a warning the first time and stop trying subsequently. When do we cut the alpha? If I look at it at about 10-11pm EST is that too late? -- greg
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Marcin Mańk <marcin.mank@gmail.com> — 2010-02-15T11:34:44Z
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:02 AM, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > Hi Marcin, > > Sounds rather unlikely to me. Its likely handled at an upper layer (vfs in linux' case) and only overloaded when an optimized implementation is available. > Which os do you see implementing that only on a part of the filesystems? > I have a Windows XP dev machine, which runs virtualbox, which runs ubuntu, which mounts a windows directory through vboxfs fsync does error out on directories inside that mount. btw: 8.4.2 initdb won`t work there too, So this is not a regression. The error is: DEBUG: creating and filling new WAL file LOG: could not link file "pg_xlog/xlogtemp.2367" to "pg_xlog/000000010000000000000000" (initialization of log file 0, segment 0): Operation not permitted FATAL: could not open file "pg_xlog/000000010000000000000000" (log file 0, segment 0): No such file or directory But I would not be that sure that eg. NFS or something like that won`t complain. Ignoring the return code seems the right choice. Greetings Marcin Mańk
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Greg Stark <stark@mit.edu> — 2010-02-15T11:45:39Z
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:34 AM, marcin mank <marcin.mank@gmail.com> wrote: > LOG: could not link file "pg_xlog/xlogtemp.2367" to > "pg_xlog/000000010000000000000000" (initialization of log file 0, > This is not related -- it seems your filesystem doesn't support hard links. I thought we used "junctions" on versions of Windows that support them which I would have expected would include XP but my knowledge of Windows is thin and obsolete. -- greg
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2010-02-15T11:46:51Z
On Monday 15 February 2010 12:34:44 marcin mank wrote: > On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:02 AM, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > > Hi Marcin, > > > > Sounds rather unlikely to me. Its likely handled at an upper layer (vfs > > in linux' case) and only overloaded when an optimized implementation is > > available. Which os do you see implementing that only on a part of the > > filesystems? > > I have a Windows XP dev machine, which runs virtualbox, which runs > ubuntu, which mounts a windows directory through vboxfs > btw: 8.4.2 initdb won`t work there too, So this is not a regression. > The error is: > DEBUG: creating and filling new WAL file > LOG: could not link file "pg_xlog/xlogtemp.2367" to > "pg_xlog/000000010000000000000000" (initialization of log file 0, > segment 0): Operation not permitted > FATAL: could not open file "pg_xlog/000000010000000000000000" (log > file 0, segment 0): No such file or directory That does seem to be a different issue. Currently there are no fsyncs on directories at all, so likely your setup is hosed anyway ;-) > But I would not be that sure that eg. NFS or something like that won`t > complain. It does not. > Ignoring the return code seems the right choice. And the error hiding one as well. With delayed allocation you theoretically could error out on fsync with -ENOSPC ... Andres
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2010-02-15T11:50:49Z
On Monday 15 February 2010 12:45:39 Greg Stark wrote: > On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:34 AM, marcin mank <marcin.mank@gmail.com> wrote: > > LOG: could not link file "pg_xlog/xlogtemp.2367" to > > "pg_xlog/000000010000000000000000" (initialization of log file 0, > > This is not related -- it seems your filesystem doesn't support hard > links. I thought we used "junctions" on versions of Windows that > support them which I would have expected would include XP but my > knowledge of Windows is thin and obsolete. If I understood him correctly marcin seems to mount a windows share on linux via some vbox-proprietary pseudo filesystem. That wont get detected and thus no junctions will be used... (I have doubts you even can create them via vboxfs (or even smb)). I would consider that a unsupported setup. Agreed? Andres
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Greg Stark <stark@mit.edu> — 2010-02-15T11:55:36Z
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:50 AM, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > If I understood him correctly marcin seems to mount a windows share on linux > via some vbox-proprietary pseudo filesystem. That wont get detected and thus > no junctions will be used... (I have doubts you even can create them via > vboxfs (or even smb)). > I would consider that a unsupported setup. Agreed? I'm not sure which versions of Windows we support in general. But on further thought I thought we only used hard links for xlog files on systems where we knew they worked and just did a rename() on systems without them. So I'm puzzled why we're trying to hard link on this system. Perhaps we need to make this a run-time check instead of just making it depend on the system. -- greg
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2010-02-15T12:01:46Z
On Monday 15 February 2010 12:55:36 Greg Stark wrote: > On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:50 AM, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > > If I understood him correctly marcin seems to mount a windows share on > > linux via some vbox-proprietary pseudo filesystem. That wont get > > detected and thus no junctions will be used... (I have doubts you even > > can create them via vboxfs (or even smb)). > > I would consider that a unsupported setup. Agreed? > > I'm not sure which versions of Windows we support in general. But on > further thought I thought we only used hard links for xlog files on > systems where we knew they worked and just did a rename() on systems > without them. So I'm puzzled why we're trying to hard link on this > system. Perhaps we need to make this a run-time check instead of just > making it depend on the system. Well, I guess linux is normally a system where hardlinking is considered safe. And I dont really see a problem with that - for example we require ntfs on windows as well... In the end its only some strange filesystem whats causing the issue here... Andres
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Marcin Mańk <marcin.mank@gmail.com> — 2010-02-15T13:50:03Z
Yes, the issue with initdb failing is unrelated (and I have no problem about the fs being unsupported). But fsync still DOES fail on directories from the mount. >> But I would not be that sure that eg. NFS or something like that won`t >> complain. > It does not. > What if someone mounts a NFS share from a system that does not support directory fsync (per buildfarm: unixware, AIX) on Linux? I agree that this is asking for trouble, but... Greetings Marcin Mańk
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2010-02-15T14:02:35Z
On Monday 15 February 2010 14:50:03 marcin mank wrote: > Yes, the issue with initdb failing is unrelated (and I have no problem > about the fs being unsupported). But fsync still DOES fail on > directories from the mount. > > >> But I would not be that sure that eg. NFS or something like that won`t > >> complain. > > > > It does not. > > What if someone mounts a NFS share from a system that does not support > directory fsync (per buildfarm: unixware, AIX) on Linux? I agree that > this is asking for trouble, but... Then nothing. The fsync via nfs or such is a local operation. There is nothing like a "fsync" command transported - i.e. the fsync controls the local cache not the remote one... Andres
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Re: [COMMITTERS] pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Magnus Hagander <magnus@hagander.net> — 2010-02-15T14:15:40Z
2010/2/15 Greg Stark <stark@mit.edu>: > On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 11:34 AM, marcin mank <marcin.mank@gmail.com> wrote: >> LOG: could not link file "pg_xlog/xlogtemp.2367" to >> "pg_xlog/000000010000000000000000" (initialization of log file 0, >> > > This is not related -- it seems your filesystem doesn't support hard > links. I thought we used "junctions" on versions of Windows that > support them which I would have expected would include XP but my > knowledge of Windows is thin and obsolete. Junctions are for symbolic links, and only valid for directories. NTFS has "real" hardlinks though CreateLink(). No idea if that works on remote filesystems though. But AFAIK, we don't use that on Windows. But the rest of the thread has indicated why this shows up anyway :) -- Magnus Hagander Me: http://www.hagander.net/ Work: http://www.redpill-linpro.com/
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Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2010-02-21T23:43:26Z
On Monday 15 February 2010 01:50:57 Greg Stark wrote: > Log Message: > ----------- > Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after copying > all the data and using posix_fadvise to nudge the OS into flushing it > earlier. This also hopefully makes CREATE DATABASE avoid spamming the > cache. > > Tests show a big speedup on Linux at least on some filesystems. > > Idea and patch from Andres Freund. I just found a relatively big problem with one of your modifications on the patch - you removed the FreeDir(xldir); xldir = AllocateDir(fromdir); pair - unfortunately its crucial because otherwise the DIR does not get rewound - that resulted in *no* files getting fsync()ed (otherwise the loop above wouldn't have finished yet...). I think that was also causing the problems I pointed out in " Directory fsync and other fun"... You removed it because you didn't want to open the directory twice? I think doing that is simpler than using rewinddir - I have no idea how usable that one is on windows for example Could you add it back? Andres
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Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Greg Stark <stark@mit.edu> — 2010-02-22T00:11:49Z
On Sun, Feb 21, 2010 at 11:43 PM, Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> wrote: > Could you add it back? > Oops, sorry. Sigh. Done. -- greg
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Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2010-02-22T02:54:40Z
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> writes: > I just found a relatively big problem with one of your modifications on the > patch - you removed the > FreeDir(xldir); > xldir = AllocateDir(fromdir); > pair - unfortunately its crucial because otherwise the DIR does not get > rewound - that resulted in *no* files getting fsync()ed (otherwise the loop > above wouldn't have finished yet...). > I think that was also causing the problems I pointed out in " Directory fsync > and other fun"... Actually, that code had *multiple* problems including stat'ing the wrong file entirely, not to mention that this last commit failed to even compile. I also think it should scan the todir not the fromdir, just on general principles to avoid any possibility of race conditions. regards, tom lane
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Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Greg Stark <gsstark@mit.edu> — 2010-02-22T10:15:18Z
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 2:54 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > Actually, that code had *multiple* problems including stat'ing the wrong > file entirely, not to mention that this last commit failed to even > compile. I also think it should scan the todir not the fromdir, just on > general principles to avoid any possibility of race conditions. Argh. I'll be less careless in the future, I promise. I had concluded that scanning the original directory was odd but better because it served to double-check that all the original files actually made it and also because if there were any unrelated files present there was no need to fsync them. But I agree it's odd and not very general for copydir if we decide to use it elsewhere other than create database. -- greg
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Re: Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2010-02-22T14:53:59Z
Greg Stark <gsstark@mit.edu> writes: > On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 2:54 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: >> I also think it should scan the todir not the fromdir, just on >> general principles to avoid any possibility of race conditions. > I had concluded that scanning the original directory was odd but > better because it served to double-check that all the original files > actually made it and also because if there were any unrelated files > present there was no need to fsync them. Well, just for the record: if that was actually intentional then both of you erred seriously by not including a comment that explained that the coding was intentional (and giving the reasoning). Any reader of the code would have assumed that it was a copy-and-paste error, as I did. > But I agree it's odd and not > very general for copydir if we decide to use it elsewhere other than > create database. Yeah, to me it seems more likely to cause problems down the road than to catch anything. If the system is missing directory entries during ReadDir then we have problems far beyond what copydir can deal with. The point of the fsync loop is just to force the copy results down to the platter, not to cross-check that the source directory isn't changing. (And, what's more, I don't believe that the source directory can't change during CREATE DATABASE. Consider delayed cleanup of deleted relations during checkpoints.) regards, tom lane
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Re: [COMMITTERS] Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2010-02-22T15:42:08Z
BTW, I notice that after allegedly fixing things, we are now seeing fsync failures during CREATE DATABASE in the installcheck phase of buildfarm runs on (apparently) all the Windows critters, plus a couple of other platforms too. This mystifies me. I could believe that there was something still wrong with copydir.c, but then how come these machines are getting through the earlier "make check" phase? I made a couple of code tweaks just now to try to get more information --- the reported EBADF error numbers seem fairly implausible in themselves, so I wondered if that's *really* what fsync is reporting. I don't have a lot of hope for that though. Any theories about what is happening? regards, tom lane
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Re: [COMMITTERS] Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2010-02-23T05:37:26Z
I wrote: > Any theories about what is happening? Hah --- the AIX failures, at least, are explained at http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/aix/v6r1/index.jsp?topic=/com.ibm.aix.basetechref/doc/basetrf1/fsync.htm which says Error Codes The fsync or fsync_range subroutine is unsuccessful if one or more of the following are true: EIO An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to the file system. EBADF The FileDescriptor parameter is not a valid file descriptor open for writing. EINVAL The file is not a regular file. EINTR The subroutine was interrupted by a signal. So the problem is that fsync_fname is trying to fsync a file it's opened O_RDONLY. I don't know whether Windows is similarly picky, but we'll soon find out. Now, this doesn't mean that all is fine and dandy. I believe that a majority of Unixen will reject attempts to open directories for writing, so this solution puts us even further away from being able to fsync the directories. I would bet however that the platforms that reject this are ones that don't need fsync on directories. Maybe we just have to have two different code paths depending on platform :-( regards, tom lane
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Re: [COMMITTERS] Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> — 2010-02-23T07:43:21Z
Hi Tom, On Tuesday 23 February 2010 06:37:26 Tom Lane wrote: > I wrote: > > Any theories about what is happening? > Now, this doesn't mean that all is fine and dandy. I believe that a > majority of Unixen will reject attempts to open directories for writing, > so this solution puts us even further away from being able to fsync the > directories. I would bet however that the platforms that reject this > are ones that don't need fsync on directories. Maybe we just have to > have two different code paths depending on platform :-( Cool. You can't open a directory for writing under linux as well though - so that wont be the decisive argument. Do you have a better idea than a configure test? Andres
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Re: [COMMITTERS] Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Greg Stark <stark@mit.edu> — 2010-02-23T09:12:02Z
On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 5:37 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > So the problem is that fsync_fname is trying to fsync a file it's opened > O_RDONLY. I don't know whether Windows is similarly picky, but we'll > soon find out. > Argh, now I feel silly. I had actually found that in my searches after the first batch of problems. But somehow i didn't connect that to the current problems. Sorry. There are other similarly confused OSes that don't allow fsync on read-only file descriptors: http://svn.haxx.se/dev/archive-2006-02/0488.shtml (I wonder if some of them are doing fsync wrong and only syncing changes written to this file descriptor and not any file descriptor for this file?) The plan I was thinking of was to pass a flag indicating if it's a directory to fsync_fname() and open it RD_ONLY if it's a directory and RDRW if it's a file. Then ignore any error returns (or at least EBADF and EINVAL) iff the flag indicating it was a directory was true. I don't like using configure tests for this because I fear someone could compile Postgres on a system with one set of behaviour and then switch to a different kernel version with a different set of behaviour. In the worst case it could be filesystem dependent whether you can open directories or whether they accept fsyncs. -- greg
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Re: [COMMITTERS] Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2010-02-23T15:38:53Z
Greg Stark <stark@mit.edu> writes: > I don't like using configure tests for this because I fear someone > could compile Postgres on a system with one set of behaviour and then > switch to a different kernel version with a different set of > behaviour. In the worst case it could be filesystem dependent whether > you can open directories or whether they accept fsyncs. Yeah, and there's also the problem of cross-compilation. I don't want a configure test either if we can avoid it. > The plan I was thinking of was to pass a flag indicating if it's a > directory to fsync_fname() and open it RD_ONLY if it's a directory and > RDRW if it's a file. Then ignore any error returns (or at least EBADF > and EINVAL) iff the flag indicating it was a directory was true. Works for me, but let's first try just ignoring EBADF, which is the only value we saw in the recent buildfarm failures. If we got past the fd<0 test then EBADF could only indicate a rdonly failure, whereas it's less clear what EINVAL might cover. regards, tom lane
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Re: [COMMITTERS] Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2010-02-23T16:13:06Z
I wrote: > BTW, I notice that after allegedly fixing things, we are now seeing > fsync failures during CREATE DATABASE in the installcheck phase of > buildfarm runs on (apparently) all the Windows critters, plus a > couple of other platforms too. This mystifies me. I could believe > that there was something still wrong with copydir.c, but then how > come these machines are getting through the earlier "make check" > phase? BTW, although things seem to be going green with the RDONLY->RDWR change, I'm still mystified why these machines didn't fail at "make check". Is it possible that "make check" runs the postmaster with fsync disabled? I don't see that in the code anywhere... regards, tom lane
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Re: [COMMITTERS] Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Greg Stark <stark@mit.edu> — 2010-02-28T18:00:07Z
On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 3:38 PM, Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: >> The plan I was thinking of was to pass a flag indicating if it's a >> directory to fsync_fname() and open it RD_ONLY if it's a directory and >> RDRW if it's a file. Then ignore any error returns (or at least EBADF >> and EINVAL) iff the flag indicating it was a directory was true. > > Works for me, but let's first try just ignoring EBADF, which is the only > value we saw in the recent buildfarm failures. If we got past the fd<0 > test then EBADF could only indicate a rdonly failure, whereas it's less > clear what EINVAL might cover. So I'm thinking of something like this. Ignore ESDIR when opening a directory (and return immediately) and ignore EBADF when trying to fsync a directory. -- greg
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Re: [COMMITTERS] Re: pgsql: Speed up CREATE DATABASE by deferring the fsyncs until after
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> — 2010-02-28T19:31:00Z
Greg Stark <stark@mit.edu> writes: > So I'm thinking of something like this. > Ignore ESDIR when opening a directory (and return immediately) > and ignore EBADF when trying to fsync a directory. Seems reasonable, but get rid of the comment "However we can't do this just yet, it has portability issues"; and you've got a double semicolon in one place. It might also be worth commenting the BasicOpenFile calls along the lines of "Many OSs don't let us open directories RDWR, while some reject fsync on files opened RDONLY, so we need two cases." regards, tom lane