postgresql/contrib/pgbench/README.pgbench

194 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

pgbench README 2002/07/20 Tatsuo Ishii (t-ishii@sra.co.jp)
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
o What is pgbench?
pgbench is a simple program to run a benchmark test sort of
"TPC-B". pgbench is a client application of PostgreSQL and runs
with PostgreSQL only. It performs lots of small and simple
transactions including select/update/insert operations then
calculates number of transactions successfully completed within a
second (transactions per second, tps). Targeting data includes a
table with at least 100k tuples.
Example outputs from pgbench look like:
number of clients: 4
number of transactions per client: 100
number of processed transactions: 400/400
tps = 19.875015(including connections establishing)
tps = 20.098827(excluding connections establishing)
Similar program called "JDBCBench" already exists, but it requires
Java that may not be available on every platform. Moreover some
people concerned about the overhead of Java that might lead
inaccurate results. So I decided to write in pure C, and named
it "pgbench."
o features of pgbench
- pgbench is written in C using libpq only. So it is very portable
and easy to install.
- pgbench can simulate concurrent connections using asynchronous
capability of libpq. No threading is required.
o How to install pgbench
(1) Configure and build the standard Postgres distribution.
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
You can get away with just running configure at the top level
and doing "make all" in src/interfaces/libpq.
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
(2) Run make in this directory.
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
You will see an executable file "pgbench". You can run it here,
or install it with the standard Postgres programs by doing
"make install".
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
o How to use pgbench?
(1) Initialize database by:
pgbench -i <dbname>
where <dbname> is the name of database. pgbench uses four tables
accounts, branches, history and tellers. These tables will be
destroyed. Be very careful if you have tables having same
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
names. Default test data contains:
table # of tuples
-------------------------
branches 1
tellers 10
accounts 100000
history 0
You can increase the number of tuples by using -s option. See
below.
(2) Run the benchmark test
pgbench <dbname>
The default configuration is:
number of clients: 1
number of transactions per client: 10
o options
pgbench has number of options.
-h hostname
hostname where the backend is running. If this option
is omitted, pgbench will connect to the localhost via
Unix domain socket.
-p port
the port number that the backend is accepting. default is
libpq's default, usually 5432.
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
-c number_of_clients
Number of clients simulated. default is 1.
-t number_of_transactions
Number of transactions each client runs. default is 10.
-s scaling_factor
this should be used with -i (initialize) option.
number of tuples generated will be multiple of the
scaling factor. For example, -s 100 will imply 10M
(10,000,000) tuples in the accounts table.
default is 1. NOTE: scaling factor should be at least
as large as the largest number of clients you intend
to test; else you'll mostly be measuring update contention.
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
-U login
Specify db user's login name if it is different from
the Unix login name.
-P password
Specify the db password. CAUTION: using this option
might be a security hole since ps command will
show the password. Use this for TESTING PURPOSE ONLY.
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
-n
No vacuuming and cleaning the history table prior to the
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
test is performed.
-v
Do vacuuming before testing. This will take some time.
With neither -n nor -v, pgbench will vacuum tellers and
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
branches tables only.
-S
Perform select only transactions instead of TPC-B.
-C
Establish connection for each transaction, rather than
doing it just once at beginning of pgbench in the normal
mode. This is useful to measure the connection overhead.
-l
Write the time taken by each transaction to a logfile,
with the name "pgbench_log.xxx", where xxx is the PID
of the pgbench process. The format of the log is:
client_id transaction_no time
where time is measured in microseconds.
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
-d
debug option.
o What is the "transaction" actually performed in pgbench?
(1) begin;
(2) update accounts set abalance = abalance + :delta where aid = :aid;
(3) select abalance from accounts where aid = :aid;
(4) update tellers set tbalance = tbalance + :delta where tid = :tid;
(5) update branches set bbalance = bbalance + :delta where bid = :bid;
(6) insert into history(tid,bid,aid,delta) values(:tid,:bid,:aid,:delta);
(7) end;
o License?
Basically it is same as BSD license. See pgbench.c for more details.
o History
2003/06/10
* fix uninitialized memory bug
* add support for PGHOST, PGPORT, PGUSER environment variables
2002/07/20
* patch contributed by Neil Conway.
* code/document clean up and add -l option.
2002/02/24
* do not CHECKPOINT anymore while initializing benchmark
* database. Add -N option.
2001/10/24
* "time"->"mtime"
2001/09/09
* Add -U, -P, -C options
2000-06-19 22:02:16 +08:00
2000/1/15 pgbench-1.2 contributed to PostgreSQL
* Add -v option
1999/09/29 pgbench-1.1 released
* Apply cygwin patches contributed by Yutaka Tanida
* More robust when backends die
* Add -S option (select only)
1999/09/04 pgbench-1.0 released