• Tatsuo Ishii's avatar
    Multi-threaded version of pgbench contributed by ITAGAKI Takahiro, · 3da0dfb4
    Tatsuo Ishii authored
    reviewed by Greg Smith and Josh Williams.
    
    Following is the proposal from ITAGAKI Takahiro:
    
    Pgbench is a famous tool to measure postgres performance, but nowadays
    it does not work well because it cannot use multiple CPUs. On the other
    hand, postgres server can use CPUs very well, so the bottle-neck of
    workload is *in pgbench*.
    
    Multi-threading would be a solution. The attached patch adds -j
    (number of jobs) option to pgbench. If the value N is greater than 1,
    pgbench runs with N threads. Connections are equally-divided into
    them (ex. -c64 -j4 => 4 threads with 16 connections each). It can
    run on POSIX platforms with pthread and on Windows with win32 threads.
    
    Here are results of multi-threaded pgbench runs on Fedora 11 with intel
    core i7 (8 logical cores = 4 physical cores * HT). -j8 (8 threads) was
    the best and the tps is 4.5 times of -j1, that is a traditional result.
    
    $ pgbench -i -s10
    $ pgbench -n -S -c64 -j1   =>  tps = 11600.158593
    $ pgbench -n -S -c64 -j2   =>  tps = 17947.100954
    $ pgbench -n -S -c64 -j4   =>  tps = 26571.124001
    $ pgbench -n -S -c64 -j8   =>  tps = 52725.470403
    $ pgbench -n -S -c64 -j16  =>  tps = 38976.675319
    $ pgbench -n -S -c64 -j32  =>  tps = 28998.499601
    $ pgbench -n -S -c64 -j64  =>  tps = 26701.877815
    
    Is it acceptable to use pthread in contrib module?
    If ok, I will add the patch to the next commitfest.
    3da0dfb4
pgbench.c 51.4 KB