> tprintf.patch
>
> tprintf.patch
>
> adds functions and macros which implement a conditional trace package
> with the ability to change flags and numeric options of running
> backends at runtime.
> Options/flags can be specified in the command line and/or read from
> the file pg_options in the data directory.
#define TAPETEMP "pg_btsortXXXXXX"
to:
#define TAPETEMP "pg_btsortXXXXXXX"
For some reason, under FreeBSD, it appears that the mktemp() value needs the
extra 'X' to improve/ensure uniqueness
==========================================
What follows is a set of diffs that cleans up the usage of BLCKSZ.
As a side effect, the person compiling the code can change the
value of BLCKSZ _at_their_own_risk_. By that, I mean that I've
tried it here at 4096 and 16384 with no ill-effects. A value
of 4096 _shouldn't_ affect much as far as the kernel/file system
goes, but making it bigger than 8192 can have severe consequences
if you don't know what you're doing. 16394 worked for me, _BUT_
when I went to 32768 and did an initdb, the SCSI driver broke and
the partition that I was running under went to hell in a hand
basket. Had to reboot and do a good bit of fsck'ing to fix things up.
The patch can be safely applied though. Just leave BLCKSZ = 8192
and everything is as before. It basically only cleans up all of the
references to BLCKSZ in the code.
If this patch is applied, a comment in the config.h file though above
the BLCKSZ define with warning about monkeying around with it would
be a good idea.
Darren darrenk@insightdist.com
(Also cleans up some of the #includes in files referencing BLCKSZ.)
==========================================
index tuple (logical position within A LEVEL). bti_oid & bti_dummy
taken off from BTItemData.
2. Fix for multi-column indices (nbtsearch.c):
_bt_binsrch() - for searches on internal pages having keysize <
number of attrs we point at the last item < the scankey, not at the
first item = the scankey;
_bt_moveright() - if keysize < number of attrs we compare scankey with
_last_ item on current page to decide should we move right or
not.
Actually required by multi-column indices support.
We still don't use btree for 'A is (not) null', but
now btree keep items with NULL attrs using single rule
for placing/finding items on pages:
NULLs greater NOT_NULLs and NULL = NULL.
+ Bulkload code (nbtsort.c) support for multi-column indices
building and NULLs.
+ Fix for btendscan()->pfree(scanopaque) from Chris Dunlop.
Patches from: aoki@CS.Berkeley.EDU (Paul M. Aoki)
i gave jolly my btree bulkload code a long, long time ago but never
gave him a bunch of my bugfixes. here's a diff against the 6.0
baseline.
for some reason, this code has slowed down somewhat relative to the
insertion-build code on very small tables. don't know why -- it used
to be within about 10%. anyway, here are some (highly unscientific!)
timings on a dec 3000/300 for synthetic tables with 10k, 100k and
1000k tuples (basically, 1mb, 10mb and 100mb heaps). 'c' means
clustered (pre-sorted) inputs and 'u' means unclustered (randomly
ordered) inputs. the 10k table basically fits in the buffer pool, but
the 100k and 1000k tables don't. as you can see, insertion build is
fine if you've sorted your heaps on your index key or if your heap
fits in core, but is absolutely horrible on unordered data (yes,
that's 7.5 hours to index 100mb of data...) because of the zillions of
random i/os.
if it doesn't work for you for whatever reason, you can always turn it
back off by flipping the FastBuild flag in nbtree.c. i don't have
time to maintain it.
good luck!
baseline code:
time psql -c 'create index c10 on k10 using btree (c int4_ops)' bttest
real 8.6
time psql -c 'create index u10 on k10 using btree (b int4_ops)' bttest
real 9.1
time psql -c 'create index c100 on k100 using btree (c int4_ops)' bttest
real 59.2
time psql -c 'create index u100 on k100 using btree (b int4_ops)' bttest
real 652.4
time psql -c 'create index c1000 on k1000 using btree (c int4_ops)' bttest
real 636.1
time psql -c 'create index u1000 on k1000 using btree (b int4_ops)' bttest
real 26772.9
bulkloading code:
time psql -c 'create index c10 on k10 using btree (c int4_ops)' bttest
real 11.3
time psql -c 'create index u10 on k10 using btree (b int4_ops)' bttest
real 10.4
time psql -c 'create index c100 on k100 using btree (c int4_ops)' bttest
real 59.5
time psql -c 'create index u100 on k100 using btree (b int4_ops)' bttest
real 63.5
time psql -c 'create index c1000 on k1000 using btree (c int4_ops)' bttest
real 636.9
time psql -c 'create index u1000 on k1000 using btree (b int4_ops)' bttest
real 701.0