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diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/man1/pg_test_timing.1 b/doc/src/sgml/man1/pg_test_timing.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000..58f7d8b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/src/sgml/man1/pg_test_timing.1 @@ -0,0 +1,208 @@ +'\" t +.\" Title: pg_test_timing +.\" Author: The PostgreSQL Global Development Group +.\" Generator: DocBook XSL Stylesheets vsnapshot <http://docbook.sf.net/> +.\" Date: 2023 +.\" Manual: PostgreSQL 15.5 Documentation +.\" Source: PostgreSQL 15.5 +.\" Language: English +.\" +.TH "PG_TEST_TIMING" "1" "2023" "PostgreSQL 15.5" "PostgreSQL 15.5 Documentation" +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.\" * Define some portability stuff +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.\" http://bugs.debian.org/507673 +.\" http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/groff/2009-02/msg00013.html +.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +.ie \n(.g .ds Aq \(aq +.el .ds Aq ' +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.\" * set default formatting +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.\" disable hyphenation +.nh +.\" disable justification (adjust text to left margin only) +.ad l +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.\" * MAIN CONTENT STARTS HERE * +.\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- +.SH "NAME" +pg_test_timing \- measure timing overhead +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.HP \w'\fBpg_test_timing\fR\ 'u +\fBpg_test_timing\fR [\fIoption\fR...] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.PP +pg_test_timing +is a tool to measure the timing overhead on your system and confirm that the system time never moves backwards\&. Systems that are slow to collect timing data can give less accurate +\fBEXPLAIN ANALYZE\fR +results\&. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.PP +pg_test_timing +accepts the following command\-line options: +.PP +\fB\-d \fR\fB\fIduration\fR\fR +.br +\fB\-\-duration=\fR\fB\fIduration\fR\fR +.RS 4 +Specifies the test duration, in seconds\&. Longer durations give slightly better accuracy, and are more likely to discover problems with the system clock moving backwards\&. The default test duration is 3 seconds\&. +.RE +.PP +\fB\-V\fR +.br +\fB\-\-version\fR +.RS 4 +Print the +pg_test_timing +version and exit\&. +.RE +.PP +\fB\-?\fR +.br +\fB\-\-help\fR +.RS 4 +Show help about +pg_test_timing +command line arguments, and exit\&. +.RE +.SH "USAGE" +.SS "Interpreting Results" +.PP +Good results will show most (>90%) individual timing calls take less than one microsecond\&. Average per loop overhead will be even lower, below 100 nanoseconds\&. This example from an Intel i7\-860 system using a TSC clock source shows excellent performance: +.sp +.if n \{\ +.RS 4 +.\} +.nf +Testing timing overhead for 3 seconds\&. +Per loop time including overhead: 35\&.96 ns +Histogram of timing durations: + < us % of total count + 1 96\&.40465 80435604 + 2 3\&.59518 2999652 + 4 0\&.00015 126 + 8 0\&.00002 13 + 16 0\&.00000 2 +.fi +.if n \{\ +.RE +.\} +.PP +Note that different units are used for the per loop time than the histogram\&. The loop can have resolution within a few nanoseconds (ns), while the individual timing calls can only resolve down to one microsecond (us)\&. +.SS "Measuring Executor Timing Overhead" +.PP +When the query executor is running a statement using +\fBEXPLAIN ANALYZE\fR, individual operations are timed as well as showing a summary\&. The overhead of your system can be checked by counting rows with the +psql +program: +.sp +.if n \{\ +.RS 4 +.\} +.nf +CREATE TABLE t AS SELECT * FROM generate_series(1,100000); +\etiming +SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t; +EXPLAIN ANALYZE SELECT COUNT(*) FROM t; +.fi +.if n \{\ +.RE +.\} +.PP +The i7\-860 system measured runs the count query in 9\&.8 ms while the +\fBEXPLAIN ANALYZE\fR +version takes 16\&.6 ms, each processing just over 100,000 rows\&. That 6\&.8 ms difference means the timing overhead per row is 68 ns, about twice what pg_test_timing estimated it would be\&. Even that relatively small amount of overhead is making the fully timed count statement take almost 70% longer\&. On more substantial queries, the timing overhead would be less problematic\&. +.SS "Changing Time Sources" +.PP +On some newer Linux systems, it\*(Aqs possible to change the clock source used to collect timing data at any time\&. A second example shows the slowdown possible from switching to the slower acpi_pm time source, on the same system used for the fast results above: +.sp +.if n \{\ +.RS 4 +.\} +.nf +# cat /sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/available_clocksource +tsc hpet acpi_pm +# echo acpi_pm > /sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/current_clocksource +# pg_test_timing +Per loop time including overhead: 722\&.92 ns +Histogram of timing durations: + < us % of total count + 1 27\&.84870 1155682 + 2 72\&.05956 2990371 + 4 0\&.07810 3241 + 8 0\&.01357 563 + 16 0\&.00007 3 +.fi +.if n \{\ +.RE +.\} +.PP +In this configuration, the sample +\fBEXPLAIN ANALYZE\fR +above takes 115\&.9 ms\&. That\*(Aqs 1061 ns of timing overhead, again a small multiple of what\*(Aqs measured directly by this utility\&. That much timing overhead means the actual query itself is only taking a tiny fraction of the accounted for time, most of it is being consumed in overhead instead\&. In this configuration, any +\fBEXPLAIN ANALYZE\fR +totals involving many timed operations would be inflated significantly by timing overhead\&. +.PP +FreeBSD also allows changing the time source on the fly, and it logs information about the timer selected during boot: +.sp +.if n \{\ +.RS 4 +.\} +.nf +# dmesg | grep "Timecounter" +Timecounter "ACPI\-fast" frequency 3579545 Hz quality 900 +Timecounter "i8254" frequency 1193182 Hz quality 0 +Timecounters tick every 10\&.000 msec +Timecounter "TSC" frequency 2531787134 Hz quality 800 +# sysctl kern\&.timecounter\&.hardware=TSC +kern\&.timecounter\&.hardware: ACPI\-fast \-> TSC +.fi +.if n \{\ +.RE +.\} +.PP +Other systems may only allow setting the time source on boot\&. On older Linux systems the "clock" kernel setting is the only way to make this sort of change\&. And even on some more recent ones, the only option you\*(Aqll see for a clock source is "jiffies"\&. Jiffies are the older Linux software clock implementation, which can have good resolution when it\*(Aqs backed by fast enough timing hardware, as in this example: +.sp +.if n \{\ +.RS 4 +.\} +.nf +$ cat /sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/available_clocksource +jiffies +$ dmesg | grep time\&.c +time\&.c: Using 3\&.579545 MHz WALL PM GTOD PIT/TSC timer\&. +time\&.c: Detected 2400\&.153 MHz processor\&. +$ pg_test_timing +Testing timing overhead for 3 seconds\&. +Per timing duration including loop overhead: 97\&.75 ns +Histogram of timing durations: + < us % of total count + 1 90\&.23734 27694571 + 2 9\&.75277 2993204 + 4 0\&.00981 3010 + 8 0\&.00007 22 + 16 0\&.00000 1 + 32 0\&.00000 1 +.fi +.if n \{\ +.RE +.\} +.SS "Clock Hardware and Timing Accuracy" +.PP +Collecting accurate timing information is normally done on computers using hardware clocks with various levels of accuracy\&. With some hardware the operating systems can pass the system clock time almost directly to programs\&. A system clock can also be derived from a chip that simply provides timing interrupts, periodic ticks at some known time interval\&. In either case, operating system kernels provide a clock source that hides these details\&. But the accuracy of that clock source and how quickly it can return results varies based on the underlying hardware\&. +.PP +Inaccurate time keeping can result in system instability\&. Test any change to the clock source very carefully\&. Operating system defaults are sometimes made to favor reliability over best accuracy\&. And if you are using a virtual machine, look into the recommended time sources compatible with it\&. Virtual hardware faces additional difficulties when emulating timers, and there are often per operating system settings suggested by vendors\&. +.PP +The Time Stamp Counter (TSC) clock source is the most accurate one available on current generation CPUs\&. It\*(Aqs the preferred way to track the system time when it\*(Aqs supported by the operating system and the TSC clock is reliable\&. There are several ways that TSC can fail to provide an accurate timing source, making it unreliable\&. Older systems can have a TSC clock that varies based on the CPU temperature, making it unusable for timing\&. Trying to use TSC on some older multicore CPUs can give a reported time that\*(Aqs inconsistent among multiple cores\&. This can result in the time going backwards, a problem this program checks for\&. And even the newest systems can fail to provide accurate TSC timing with very aggressive power saving configurations\&. +.PP +Newer operating systems may check for the known TSC problems and switch to a slower, more stable clock source when they are seen\&. If your system supports TSC time but doesn\*(Aqt default to that, it may be disabled for a good reason\&. And some operating systems may not detect all the possible problems correctly, or will allow using TSC even in situations where it\*(Aqs known to be inaccurate\&. +.PP +The High Precision Event Timer (HPET) is the preferred timer on systems where it\*(Aqs available and TSC is not accurate\&. The timer chip itself is programmable to allow up to 100 nanosecond resolution, but you may not see that much accuracy in your system clock\&. +.PP +Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) provides a Power Management (PM) Timer, which Linux refers to as the acpi_pm\&. The clock derived from acpi_pm will at best provide 300 nanosecond resolution\&. +.PP +Timers used on older PC hardware include the 8254 Programmable Interval Timer (PIT), the real\-time clock (RTC), the Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller (APIC) timer, and the Cyclone timer\&. These timers aim for millisecond resolution\&. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +\fBEXPLAIN\fR(7) |