Files
neon/test_runner/performance/test_hot_table.py
Peter Bendel c11b9cb43d Run Performance bench on more platforms (#8312)
## Problem

https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/14721

## Summary of changes

add one more platform to benchmarking job 


57535c039c/.github/workflows/benchmarking.yml (L57C3-L126)

Run with pg 16, provisioner k8-neonvm by default on the new platform.

Adjust some test cases to

- not depend on database client <-> database server latency by pushing
loops into server side pl/pgSQL functions
- increase statement and test timeouts

First successful run of these job steps 

https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/actions/runs/9869817756/job/27254280428
2024-07-11 10:07:12 +01:00

52 lines
2.0 KiB
Python

from contextlib import closing
import pytest
from fixtures.compare_fixtures import PgCompare
from pytest_lazyfixture import lazy_fixture
@pytest.mark.parametrize(
"env",
[
# The test is too slow to run in CI, but fast enough to run with remote tests
pytest.param(lazy_fixture("neon_compare"), id="neon", marks=pytest.mark.slow),
pytest.param(lazy_fixture("vanilla_compare"), id="vanilla", marks=pytest.mark.slow),
pytest.param(lazy_fixture("remote_compare"), id="remote", marks=pytest.mark.remote_cluster),
],
)
def test_hot_table(env: PgCompare):
# Update a small table many times, then measure read performance
num_rows = 100000 # initial table size only about 4 MB
num_writes = 10000000 # write approximately 349 MB blocks > 128 MB shared_buffers
num_reads = 10
with closing(env.pg.connect()) as conn:
with conn.cursor() as cur:
cur.execute("drop table if exists t;")
# Write many updates to a small table
with env.record_duration("write"):
cur.execute("create table t (i integer primary key);")
cur.execute(f"insert into t values (generate_series(1,{num_rows}));")
# PL/pgSQL block to perform updates (and avoid latency between client and server)
# - however a single staement should not run into a timeout so we increase it
cur.execute("SET statement_timeout = '4h';")
cur.execute(
f"""
DO $$
DECLARE
r integer := {num_rows};
BEGIN
FOR j IN 1..{num_writes} LOOP
UPDATE t SET i = j + r WHERE i = j;
END LOOP;
END $$;
"""
)
# Read the table
with env.record_duration("read"):
for _ in range(num_reads):
cur.execute("select * from t;")
cur.fetchall()