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authorAndres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>2023-08-14 09:54:03 -0700
committerAndres Freund <andres@anarazel.de>2023-08-14 11:33:09 -0700
commit82a4edabd272f70d044faec8cf7fd1eab92d9991 (patch)
tree10ffcc17c59ed5c753822166fff4c082d394a9f7 /contrib/postgres_fdw/postgres_fdw.c
parent94f9c087421ccda6a615df2dda6c40fb99570fa9 (diff)
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hio: Take number of prior relation extensions into account
The new relation extension logic, introduced in 00d1e02be24, could lead to slowdowns in some scenarios. E.g., when loading narrow rows into a table using COPY, the caller of RelationGetBufferForTuple() will only request a small number of pages. Without concurrency, we just extended using pwritev() in that case. However, if there is *some* concurrency, we switched between extending by a small number of pages and a larger number of pages, depending on the number of waiters for the relation extension logic. However, some filesystems, XFS in particular, do not perform well when switching between extending files using fallocate() and pwritev(). To avoid that issue, remember the number of prior relation extensions in BulkInsertState and extend more aggressively if there were prior relation extensions. That not just avoids the aforementioned slowdown, but also leads to noticeable performance gains in other situations, primarily due to extending more aggressively when there is no concurrency. I should have done it this way from the get go. Reported-by: Masahiko Sawada <sawada.mshk@gmail.com> Author: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAD21AoDvDmUQeJtZrau1ovnT_smN940=Kp6mszNGK3bq9yRN6g@mail.gmail.com Backpatch: 16-, where the new relation extension code was added
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