Return-Path: X-Original-To: apmail-db-derby-dev-archive@www.apache.org Delivered-To: apmail-db-derby-dev-archive@www.apache.org Received: from mail.apache.org (hermes.apache.org [140.211.11.3]) by minotaur.apache.org (Postfix) with SMTP id BCB43183A5 for ; Wed, 10 Feb 2016 01:17:18 +0000 (UTC) Received: (qmail 15633 invoked by uid 500); 10 Feb 2016 01:17:18 -0000 Delivered-To: apmail-db-derby-dev-archive@db.apache.org Received: (qmail 15606 invoked by uid 500); 10 Feb 2016 01:17:18 -0000 Mailing-List: contact derby-dev-help@db.apache.org; run by ezmlm Precedence: bulk List-Help: List-Unsubscribe: List-Post: List-Id: Reply-To: Delivered-To: mailing list derby-dev@db.apache.org Received: (qmail 15440 invoked by uid 99); 10 Feb 2016 01:17:18 -0000 Received: from arcas.apache.org (HELO arcas) (140.211.11.28) by apache.org (qpsmtpd/0.29) with ESMTP; Wed, 10 Feb 2016 01:17:18 +0000 Received: from arcas.apache.org (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by arcas (Postfix) with ESMTP id 4645B2C14F6 for ; Wed, 10 Feb 2016 01:17:18 +0000 (UTC) Date: Wed, 10 Feb 2016 01:17:18 +0000 (UTC) From: "Bryan Pendleton (JIRA)" To: derby-dev@db.apache.org Message-ID: In-Reply-To: References: Subject: [jira] [Commented] (DERBY-6858) Apache Derby simple update statement performance becomes 1500% worse when adding one byte to a column MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-JIRA-FingerPrint: 30527f35849b9dde25b450d4833f0394 [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DERBY-6858?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15140151#comment-15140151 ] Bryan Pendleton commented on DERBY-6858: ---------------------------------------- I don't know that anyone is actively working on this. I don't know what's wrong, myself. It seems to have been this way for quite some time (I went back to Derby 10.9, which was more than 3 years ago, but perhaps the behavior is older still). It might have always been this way. As you noted, there are a lot of things to consider: access plans, I/O strategies, caching behaviors, etc. It's clear that you've demonstrated a startling difference in performance that I don't know how to explain, but personally I'm not likely to have the time to dig into this deeply right away. Are you not able to use the larger pagesize in your particular configuration? > Apache Derby simple update statement performance becomes 1500% worse when adding one byte to a column > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: DERBY-6858 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DERBY-6858 > Project: Derby > Issue Type: Bug > Affects Versions: 10.11.1.1, 10.12.1.1 > Environment: windows 7 64 bit > Reporter: somebody > Priority: Blocker > Attachments: repro.java, repro.java, repro.java > > > I have 2 tables as follows: > ParentUpdate > name varchar(255) > value int not null > primary key: name > ChildUpdate > parentName varchar(255) > name varchar(255) > value int > data varchar(1000) > primary key: name foreign key: parentName to ParentUpdate.name > When I run the statement "update ChildUpdate set parentName = 'Parent 2' where parentName = 'Parent 1'" with 2500 records in the ChildUpdate table and 1 record in the ParentUpdate table with only a single byte difference in data size in the ChildUpdate table, the performance decreases by 15 times. > When the ChildUpdate data column has exactly 14 bytes of the same character the runtime of the above query is about 500 milliseconds. When I add one more byte to the data column of ChildUpdate the performance all of a sudden becomes about 7500 milliseconds. > If i then decrease the data size back to 14 from 15 it's fast again. When i put it back to 15 it's slow again. This is reproducible every time. > Can you please help me figure out how to get the same fast performance without such seemingly random behaviour. > The query plans are below for both cases. > projection = true > constructor time (milliseconds) = 0 > open time (milliseconds) = 0 > next time (milliseconds) = 16 > close time (milliseconds) = 16 > restriction time (milliseconds) = 0 > projection time (milliseconds) = 0 > optimizer estimated row count: 51.50 > optimizer estimated cost: 796.12 > Source result set: > Table Scan ResultSet for CHILDUPDATE at read committed isolation level using exclusive row locking chosen by the optimizer > Number of opens = 1 > Rows seen = 2500 > Rows filtered = 0 > Fetch Size = 1 > constructor time (milliseconds) = 0 > open time (milliseconds) = 15 > next time (milliseconds) = 16 > close time (milliseconds) = 16 > next time in milliseconds/row = 0 > scan information: > Bit set of columns fetched={0, 1} > Number of columns fetched=2 > Number of pages visited=41 > Number of rows qualified=2500 > Number of rows visited=2500 > Scan type=heap > start position: > null > stop position: > null > qualifiers: > Column[0][0] Id: 0 > Operator: = > Ordered nulls: false > Unknown return value: false > Negate comparison result: false > optimizer estimated row count: 51.50 > optimizer estimated cost: 796.12 > total time: ~500 milliseconds > and the slow version > Statement Name: > null > Statement Text: > update ChildUpdate set parentName = 'Parent 2' where parentName = 'Parent 1' > Parse Time: 0 > Bind Time: 0 > Optimize Time: 0 > Generate Time: 0 > Compile Time: 0 > Execute Time: -1453199485700 > Begin Compilation Timestamp : 2016-01-19 05:31:25.684 > End Compilation Timestamp : 2016-01-19 05:31:25.684 > Begin Execution Timestamp : 2016-01-19 05:31:25.7 > End Execution Timestamp : 2016-01-19 05:31:33.141 > Statement Execution Plan Text: > Update ResultSet using row locking: > deferred: true > Rows updated = 2500 > Indexes updated = 2 > Execute Time = -1453199485747 > Normalize ResultSet: > Number of opens = 1 > Rows seen = 2500 > constructor time (milliseconds) = 0 > open time (milliseconds) = 0 > next time (milliseconds) = 47 > close time (milliseconds) = 0 > optimizer estimated row count: 51.50 > optimizer estimated cost: 810.94 > Source result set: > Project-Restrict ResultSet (3): > Number of opens = 1 > Rows seen = 2500 > Rows filtered = 0 > restriction = false > projection = true > constructor time (milliseconds) = 0 > open time (milliseconds) = 0 > next time (milliseconds) = 32 > close time (milliseconds) = 0 > restriction time (milliseconds) = 0 > projection time (milliseconds) = 0 > optimizer estimated row count: 51.50 > optimizer estimated cost: 810.94 > Source result set: > Project-Restrict ResultSet (2): > Number of opens = 1 > Rows seen = 2500 > Rows filtered = 0 > restriction = false > projection = true > constructor time (milliseconds) = 0 > open time (milliseconds) = 0 > next time (milliseconds) = 32 > close time (milliseconds) = 0 > restriction time (milliseconds) = 0 > projection time (milliseconds) = 0 > optimizer estimated row count: 51.50 > optimizer estimated cost: 810.94 > Source result set: > Index Scan ResultSet for CHILDUPDATE using index TESTINDEX at read committed isolation level using exclusive row locking chosen by the optimizer > Number of opens = 1 > Rows seen = 2500 > Rows filtered = 0 > Fetch Size = 1 > constructor time (milliseconds) = 0 > open time (milliseconds) = 0 > next time (milliseconds) = 32 > close time (milliseconds) = 0 > next time in milliseconds/row = 0 > scan information: > Bit set of columns fetched={0, 1, 2} > Number of columns fetched=3 > Number of deleted rows visited=0 > Number of pages visited=42 > Number of rows qualified=2500 > Number of rows visited=2500 > Scan type=btree > Tree height=2 > start position: > None > stop position: > None > qualifiers: > Column[0][0] Id: 1 > Operator: = > Ordered nulls: false > Unknown return value: false > Negate comparison result: false > optimizer estimated row count: 51.50 > optimizer estimated cost: 810.94 > total time: ~7 seconds 500 milliseconds > please also see post: > http://stackoverflow.com/questions/34874762/apache-derby-simple-update-statement-performance-becomes-1500-worse-when-adding -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)