Re: XFS File systems and PostgreSQL

Doug McNaught <doug@wireboard.com>

From: Doug McNaught <doug@wireboard.com>
To: Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us>
Cc: bruc@acm.org, pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Date: 2001-05-03T00:27:35Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us> writes:

> Yes, the irony is that a journaling file system is being used to have
> fast, reliable restore after crash bootup, but with no fsync, the db is
> probably hosed.

It just struck me--is it necessarily true that we get the big
performance hit?  

On a non-data-journaling FS (like ext3), since WAL files are
preallocated (right?), a WAL sync shouldn't involve any metadata
updates.  So we just write the WAL data to a (hopefully contiguous)
chunk of data blocks.

On an FS that journals data AND metadata, fsync() can return once the
updates are committed to the log--it doesn't have to wait until the
log is back-flushed (or whatever you call it) to the main filesystem. 

The above is theoretical, and I don't know enough about Reiser or XFS
to know how they behave. 

-Doug
-- 
The rain man gave me two cures; he said jump right in,
The first was Texas medicine--the second was just railroad gin,
And like a fool I mixed them, and it strangled up my mind,
Now people just get uglier, and I got no sense of time...          --Dylan