wiki:Performance

Version 10 (modified by James Passmore, 11 years ago) ( diff )

Guidelines

Benchmarks

Ingestion

Below are the results of ingesting one dataset using various tilings and postgres parameters.

Regular tiling

The dataset is 150 png rgb images of size 1024x608, so that each image is 1867776 bytes uncompressed, or 280 MB in total.

  • Default postgres parameters:
Tiling scheme Tile size Import time DB size before DB size after BLOBs size BLOBs size2
0:31,0:31,0:149 460800 84 minutes 184M 19416M 267 MB 18 GB
  • Changed parameters in postgresql.conf: shared buffers = 1024 MB, temp_buffers = 8MB, fsync = off, synchronous_commit = off, wal_sync_method = fsync, full_page_writes = off, wal_buffers = 1MB, wal_writer_delay = 2000ms, checkpoint_segments = 32

Tiling scheme Tile size Import time DB size before DB size after BLOBs size BLOBs size2
0:31,0:31,0:149 460800 35 minutes 184M 19416M 267 MB 18 GB

Tiling scheme Tile size Import time DB size before DB size after BLOBs size BLOBs size2
0:31,0:31,0:149 460800 48 seconds 37M 329M 267 MB 267 MB

Regular tiling + VACUUM

The dataset is 50 png rgb images of size 1024x608, so that each image is 1867776 bytes uncompressed, or 89 MB in total.

  • Changed parameters in postgresql.conf: shared buffers = 1024 MB, temp_buffers = 8MB, fsync = off, synchronous_commit = off, wal_sync_method = fsync, full_page_writes = off, wal_buffers = 8MB, wal_writer_delay = 10000ms, checkpoint_segments = 16

Tiling scheme Tile size Import time DB size before DB size after BLOBs size BLOBs size2 BLOBs after VACUUM
0:31,0:31,0:149 460800 7m 34s 47M 2464M 267 MB 1776 MB 96MB

PostgreSQL tips

Total size of BLOBs

BLOBs are stored in the pg_largeobject in postgres. Each BLOB is divided into rows (pages) of 2048 bytes typically. More info here

Query below computes the space that all BLOBs take.

SELECT pg_size_pretty(count(loid) * 2048) FROM pg_largeobject;

Total size of BLOBs 2

SELECT tablename,
       pg_size_pretty(size) AS size_pretty,
       pg_size_pretty(total_size) AS total_size_pretty
FROM (SELECT *, pg_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename) AS size,
                pg_total_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename) AS total_size
      FROM pg_tables) AS TABLES
WHERE TABLES.tablename = 'pg_largeobject'
ORDER BY total_size DESC;

Size of individual BLOBs

SELECT 	loid,
        pg_size_pretty(count(*) * 2048)
FROM pg_catalog.pg_largeobject
GROUP BY loid
ORDER BY count(*) DESC;

Size of RASBASE tables

SELECT tablename,
       pg_size_pretty(size) AS size_pretty,
       pg_size_pretty(total_size) AS total_size_pretty
FROM (SELECT *, pg_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename) AS size,
                pg_total_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename) AS total_size
      FROM pg_tables) AS TABLES
WHERE TABLES.schemaname = 'public'
ORDER BY total_size DESC;

Reset WAL

Write-ahead logging is used to ensure data integrity. In postgres these logs are stored in pg_xlog and it's recommended to put them in a separate disk. To reset the logs:

  1. service stop postgresql
  2. sudo -u postgres pg_resetxlog $PGDATA

Remove orphaned BLOBs

Orphaned BLOBs are BLOBs that are stored but they are not referenced by oid from any table in the database. To clear them up use vacuumlo

  • vacuumlo RASBASE

Note, vacuumlo is an additional module made available through postgresql-contrib

VACUUM tables

Tuples that have been deleted or obsoleted are normally not physically deleted, and thus the space continues to be still used, until a VACUUM is performed on the database or specific tables. VACUUM alone doesn't free up the disk space for further use by the OS, VACUUM FULL is necessary for this. In rasdaman it's most important to do periodic VACUUM on the BLOBs table:

  • psql -d RASBASE -c "VACUUM FULL pg_largeobject"

or

  • vacuumdb -d RASBASE -t "pg_largeobject" -f

Tile cache

A tile cache can be enabled in rasdaman during bulk ingestion, in order to work around inefficiencies of BLOB handling in postgres and slow performance for certain tiling schemes.

How to use

The cache can be enabled in rasmgr.conf by specifying a --cachelimit parameter after the -xp parameter:

  --cachelimit <limit>	(default: 0)
         specifies upper limit in bytes on using memory for caching

An example rasmgr.conf configuration that allows the cache to use up to 1GB memory:

define dbh rasdaman_host -connect RASBASE
define db RASBASE -dbh rasdaman_host

define srv N1 -host HOST -type n -port 9000 -dbh rasdaman_host
change srv N1 -countdown 20000000 -autorestart on -xp --timeout 30000000 --cachelimit 1073741824

When enabled, INSERT and UPDATE rasql statements can be issued in the normal way. At the end of the ingestion a COMMIT command should be executed, to make sure that the cache is cleared and everything is flushed to disk. E.g.

rasql -q 'insert into coll ...'
rasql -q 'update coll ...'
rasql -q 'update coll ...'
rasql -q 'update coll ...'

# done with ingestion
rasql -q 'commit'

Important limitation

At the moment the tile cache should be used during bulk ingestion _ONLY_, and disabled afterwards. Leaving the tile cache on will cause selection queries to fail randomly. Furthermore, it is best to have only one server defined in rasmgr.conf, and -countdown and --timeout parameters set to very large values.

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