PostgresSQL vs super pages
Konstantin Belousov
kostikbel at gmail.com
Sun Oct 14 11:46:00 UTC 2018
On Sun, Oct 14, 2018 at 10:58:08PM +1300, Thomas Munro wrote:
> On Sun, 14 Oct 2018 at 12:50, Konstantin Belousov <kostikbel at gmail.com> wrote:
> > On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 02:01:20PM +1300, Thomas Munro wrote:
> > > On Thu, 11 Oct 2018 at 13:20, Konstantin Belousov <kostikbel at gmail.com> wrote:
> > > > On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 12:59:41PM +1300, Thomas Munro wrote:
> > > > > shm_open("/PostgreSQL.1721888107",O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL,0600) = 46 (0x2e)
> > > > > ftruncate(46,0x400000) = 0 (0x0)
> > > > Try to write zeroes instead of truncating.
> > > > This should activate the fast path in the fault handler, and if the
> > > > pages allocated for backing store of the shm object were from reservation,
> > > > you should get superpage mapping on the first fault without promotion.
> > >
> > > If you just write() to a newly shm_open()'d fd you get a return code
> > > of 0 so I assume that doesn't work. If you ftruncate() to the desired
> > > size first, then loop writing 8192 bytes of zeroes at a time, it
> > > works. But still no super pages. I tried also with a write buffer of
> > > 2MB of zeroes, but still no super pages. I tried abandoning
> > > shm_open() and instead using a mapped file, and still no super pages.
> >
> > I did not quite scientific experiment, but you would need to try to find
> > the differences between what I did and what you observe. Below is the
> > naive test program that directly implements my suggestion, and the
> > output from the procstat -v for it after all things were set up.
> >
> ...
> > 98579 0x800e00000 0x801200000 rw- 1024 1030 3 0 --S- df
>
> Huh. Your program doesn't result in an S mapping on my laptop, but I
> tried on an EC2 t2.2xlarge machine and there it promotes to S, even if
> I comment out the write() loop (the loop that assigned to every byte
> is enough). The difference might be the amount of memory on the
> system: on my 4GB laptop, it is very reluctant to use super pages (but
> I have seen it do it, so I know it can). On a 32GB system, it does it
> immediately, and it works nicely for PostgreSQL too. So perhaps my
> problem is testing on a small RAM system, though I don't understand
> why.
How many free memory does your system have ? Free as reported by top. If
the free memory is low and fragmented, and I suppose it is on 4G laptop
which you use with X, browser and other memory-consuming applications,
system would have troubles filling the reverve, i.e reserving 2M of
2M-aligned physical pages.
You can try the test programs right after booting into single user mode.
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