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From pgsql-hackers-owner+M908@postgresql.org Sun Nov 19 14:27:43 2000
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Sun, 19 Nov 2000 14:23:06 -0500 (EST)
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From: Bruce Momjian <pgman@candle.pha.pa.us>
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Message-Id: <200011191923.OAA06790@candle.pha.pa.us>
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Subject: Re: [HACKERS] WAL fsync scheduling
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In-Reply-To: <002101c0525e$2d964480$b97a30d0@sectorbase.com> "from Vadim Mikheev
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at Nov 19, 2000 11:23:19 am"
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To: Vadim Mikheev <vmikheev@sectorbase.com>
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Date: Sun, 19 Nov 2000 14:23:06 -0500 (EST)
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CC: Tom Samplonius <tom@sdf.com>, Alfred@candle.pha.pa.us,
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Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net>, Larry@candle.pha.pa.us,
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Rosenman <ler@lerctr.org>,
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PostgreSQL-development <pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org>
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Status: OR
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[ Charset ISO-8859-1 unsupported, converting... ]
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> > There are two parts to transaction commit. The first is writing all
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> > dirty buffers or log changes to the kernel, and second is fsync of the
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> ^^^^^^^^^^^^
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> Backend doesn't write any dirty buffer to the kernel at commit time.
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Yes, I suspected that.
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>
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> > log file.
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>
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> The first part is writing commit record into WAL buffers in shmem.
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> This is what XLogInsert does. After that XLogFlush is called to ensure
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> that entire commit record is on disk. XLogFlush does *both* write() and
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> fsync() (single slock is used for both writing and fsyncing) if it needs to
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> do it at all.
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Yes, I realize there are new steps in WAL.
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>
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> > I suggest having a per-backend shared memory byte that has the following
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> > values:
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> >
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> > START_LOG_WRITE
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> > WAIT_ON_FSYNC
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> > NOT_IN_COMMIT
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> > backend_number_doing_fsync
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> >
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> > I suggest that when each backend starts a commit, it sets its byte to
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> > START_LOG_WRITE.
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> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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> Isn't START_COMMIT more meaningful?
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Yes.
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>
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> > When it gets ready to fsync, it checks all backends.
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> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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> What do you mean by this? The moment just after XLogInsert?
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Just before it calls fsync().
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>
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> > If all are NOT_IN_COMMIT, it does fsync and continues.
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>
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> 1st edition:
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> > If one or more are in START_LOG_WRITE, it waits until no one is in
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> > START_LOG_WRITE. It then checks all WAIT_ON_FSYNC, and if it is the
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> > lowest backend in WAIT_ON_FSYNC, marks all others with its backend
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> > number, and does fsync. It then clears all backends with its number to
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> > NOT_IN_COMMIT. Other backend will see they are not the lowest
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> > WAIT_ON_FSYNC and will wait for their byte to be set to NOT_IN_COMMIT
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> > so they can then continue, knowing their data was synced.
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>
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> 2nd edition:
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> > I have another idea. If a backend gets to the point that it needs
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> > fsync, and there is another backend in START_LOG_WRITE, it can go to an
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> > interuptable sleep, knowing another backend will perform the fsync and
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> > wake it up. Therefore, there is no busy-wait or timed sleep.
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> >
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> > Of course, a backend must set its status to WAIT_ON_FSYNC to avoid a
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> > race condition.
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>
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> The 2nd edition is much better. But I'm not sure do we really need in
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> these per-backend bytes in shmem. Why not just have some counters?
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> We can use a semaphore to wake-up all waiters at once.
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Yes, that is much better and clearer. My idea was just to say, "if no
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one is entering commit phase, do the commit. If someone else is coming,
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sleep and wait for them to do the fsync and wake me up with a singal."
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>
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> > This allows a single backend not to sleep, and allows multiple backends
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> > to bunch up only when they are all about to commit.
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> >
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> > The reason backend numbers are written is so other backends entering the
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> > commit code will not interfere with the backends performing fsync.
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>
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> Being waked-up backend can check what's written/fsynced by calling XLogFlush.
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Seems that may not be needed anymore with a counter. The only issue is
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that other backends may enter commit while fsync() is happening. The
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process that did the fsync must be sure to wake up only the backends
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that were waiting for it, and not other backends that may be also be
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doing fsync as a group while the first fsync was happening. I leave
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those details to people more experienced. :-)
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I am just glad people liked my idea.
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--
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Bruce Momjian | http://candle.pha.pa.us
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pgman@candle.pha.pa.us | (610) 853-3000
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+ If your life is a hard drive, | 830 Blythe Avenue
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+ Christ can be your backup. | Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania 19026
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