Observation on integer types documentation

Started by Dan McGeealmost 14 years ago5 messagesdocs
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#1Dan McGee
dpmcgee@gmail.com

Hey everyone,

Reading the docs today, I came across this paragraph
(http://www.postgresql.org/docs/devel/static/datatype-numeric.html#DATATYPE-INT),
which goes back several major versions:

The type integer is the common choice, as it offers the best balance between range, storage size, and performance. The smallint type is generally only used if disk space is at a premium. The bigint type should only be used if the range of the integer type is insufficient, because the latter is definitely faster.

A few thoughts on this.
1) the use of the word "latter" isn't totally clear, or at least I had
to re-read it to realize former was 'bigint' and latter was 'integer'.
It might just be the style of writing.
2) I'm less than convinced this note belongs in modern documentation,
and set out to test that theory. My full results are below, but the
summary is this: on a 64-bit system, there seems to be only a minimal
measurable performance difference (< 5%) and very little size
difference. In the case of the indexes, the size difference is zero.
This is not true for a 32-bit system (where it is 39% slower), but the
blanket statement doesn't hold true, which is why I'm writing all this
up.

On a final note, the following paragraph also seems like it has
outlived its useful life:

On very minimal operating systems the bigint type might not function correctly, because it relies on compiler support for eight-byte integers. On such machines, bigint acts the same as integer, but still takes up eight bytes of storage. (We are not aware of any modern platform where this is the case.)

Thanks!
-Dan

Table setup (only difference is type of 'id' column):

Table "public.package_files"
Column | Type | Modifiers
--------------+------------------------+------------------------
id | integer | not null
pkg_id | integer | not null
is_directory | boolean | not null default false
directory | character varying(255) | not null
filename | character varying(255) |
Indexes:
"package_files_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
"package_files_pkg_id" btree (pkg_id) CLUSTER

Table "public.package_files_int8"
Column | Type | Modifiers
--------------+------------------------+------------------------
id | bigint | not null
pkg_id | integer | not null
is_directory | boolean | not null default false
directory | character varying(255) | not null
filename | character varying(255) |
Indexes:
"package_files_int8_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
"package_files_int8_pkg_id" btree (pkg_id) CLUSTER

# select count(*) from package_files;
2621418
# select count(*) from package_files_int8 ;
2621418

All runs below were done after issuing a few warm up queries, and both
tables went through a VACUUM/CLUSTER/ANALYZE sequence.

32-bit P4 2.4 GHz (single core). no enabled CPU frequency scaling, 1GB
total ram, shared_buffers 128MB, work_mem 4MB:

relation | size
----------------------------------+------------
public.package_files_int8 | 239 MB
public.package_files | 229 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkey | 56 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkg_id | 45 MB
public.package_files_pkey | 45 MB
public.package_files_pkg_id | 45 MB

archweb=> \timing on
Timing is on.
archweb=> \t
Showing only tuples.
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 516.558 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 519.720 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 533.330 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 519.095 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 520.253 ms

archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 731.194 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 730.329 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 724.646 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 710.815 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 724.519 ms

64-bit Core2 Quad 2.66 GHz (four core), CPU freq scaling disabled
(performance governor used), 8GB total ram, shared_buffers 128MB,
work_mem 4MB:

relation | size
----------------------------------+------------
public.package_files_int8 | 245 MB
public.package_files | 234 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkey | 56 MB
public.package_files_pkg_id | 56 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkg_id | 56 MB
public.package_files_pkey | 56 MB

dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 177.078 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.109 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 177.478 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.639 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.453 ms

dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 185.768 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 185.159 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.407 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.555 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.290 ms

Overall results:

i686 x86_64
int4 int8 int4 int8
516.558 731.194 177.078 185.768
519.72 730.329 176.109 185.159
533.33 724.646 177.478 184.407
519.095 710.815 176.639 184.555
520.253 724.519 176.453 184.29

Average 521.7912 724.3006 176.7514 184.8358
Stddev 6.6040841681 8.1530512264 0.5359499044 0.619288059
Ratio 1.3881042839 1.0457388173

#2Marcelo Lacerda
marceloslacerda@gmail.com
In reply to: Dan McGee (#1)
Re: Observation on integer types documentation

I'm new here but your proposal makes sense to me. Are the query plans equal
on both architectures?

--
Marcelo Lacerda

On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 5:59 PM, Dan McGee <dpmcgee@gmail.com> wrote:

Show quoted text

Hey everyone,

Reading the docs today, I came across this paragraph
(
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/devel/static/datatype-numeric.html#DATATYPE-INT
),
which goes back several major versions:

The type integer is the common choice, as it offers the best balance

between range, storage size, and performance. The smallint type is
generally only used if disk space is at a premium. The bigint type should
only be used if the range of the integer type is insufficient, because the
latter is definitely faster.

A few thoughts on this.
1) the use of the word "latter" isn't totally clear, or at least I had
to re-read it to realize former was 'bigint' and latter was 'integer'.
It might just be the style of writing.
2) I'm less than convinced this note belongs in modern documentation,
and set out to test that theory. My full results are below, but the
summary is this: on a 64-bit system, there seems to be only a minimal
measurable performance difference (< 5%) and very little size
difference. In the case of the indexes, the size difference is zero.
This is not true for a 32-bit system (where it is 39% slower), but the
blanket statement doesn't hold true, which is why I'm writing all this
up.

On a final note, the following paragraph also seems like it has
outlived its useful life:

On very minimal operating systems the bigint type might not function

correctly, because it relies on compiler support for eight-byte integers.
On such machines, bigint acts the same as integer, but still takes up eight
bytes of storage. (We are not aware of any modern platform where this is
the case.)

Thanks!
-Dan

Table setup (only difference is type of 'id' column):

Table "public.package_files"
Column | Type | Modifiers
--------------+------------------------+------------------------
id | integer | not null
pkg_id | integer | not null
is_directory | boolean | not null default false
directory | character varying(255) | not null
filename | character varying(255) |
Indexes:
"package_files_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
"package_files_pkg_id" btree (pkg_id) CLUSTER

Table "public.package_files_int8"
Column | Type | Modifiers
--------------+------------------------+------------------------
id | bigint | not null
pkg_id | integer | not null
is_directory | boolean | not null default false
directory | character varying(255) | not null
filename | character varying(255) |
Indexes:
"package_files_int8_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
"package_files_int8_pkg_id" btree (pkg_id) CLUSTER

# select count(*) from package_files;
2621418
# select count(*) from package_files_int8 ;
2621418

All runs below were done after issuing a few warm up queries, and both
tables went through a VACUUM/CLUSTER/ANALYZE sequence.

32-bit P4 2.4 GHz (single core). no enabled CPU frequency scaling, 1GB
total ram, shared_buffers 128MB, work_mem 4MB:

relation | size
----------------------------------+------------
public.package_files_int8 | 239 MB
public.package_files | 229 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkey | 56 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkg_id | 45 MB
public.package_files_pkey | 45 MB
public.package_files_pkg_id | 45 MB

archweb=> \timing on
Timing is on.
archweb=> \t
Showing only tuples.
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 516.558 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 519.720 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 533.330 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 519.095 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 520.253 ms

archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 731.194 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 730.329 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 724.646 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 710.815 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 724.519 ms

64-bit Core2 Quad 2.66 GHz (four core), CPU freq scaling disabled
(performance governor used), 8GB total ram, shared_buffers 128MB,
work_mem 4MB:

relation | size
----------------------------------+------------
public.package_files_int8 | 245 MB
public.package_files | 234 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkey | 56 MB
public.package_files_pkg_id | 56 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkg_id | 56 MB
public.package_files_pkey | 56 MB

dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 177.078 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.109 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 177.478 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.639 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.453 ms

dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 185.768 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 185.159 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.407 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.555 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.290 ms

Overall results:

i686 x86_64
int4 int8 int4 int8
516.558 731.194 177.078 185.768
519.72 730.329 176.109 185.159
533.33 724.646 177.478 184.407
519.095 710.815 176.639 184.555
520.253 724.519 176.453 184.29

Average 521.7912 724.3006 176.7514 184.8358
Stddev 6.6040841681 8.1530512264 0.5359499044 0.619288059
Ratio 1.3881042839 1.0457388173

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#3Dan McGee
dpmcgee@gmail.com
In reply to: Marcelo Lacerda (#2)
Re: Observation on integer types documentation

Yes, I didn't see any difference in query plans between the two.

-Dan

Show quoted text

On Sun, May 13, 2012 at 7:08 PM, Marcelo Sena <marceloslacerda@gmail.com> wrote:

I'm new here but your proposal makes sense to me. Are the query plans equal
on both architectures?

--
Marcelo Lacerda

On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 5:59 PM, Dan McGee <dpmcgee@gmail.com> wrote:

Hey everyone,

Reading the docs today, I came across this paragraph

(http://www.postgresql.org/docs/devel/static/datatype-numeric.html#DATATYPE-INT),
which goes back several major versions:

The type integer is the common choice, as it offers the best balance
between range, storage size, and performance. The smallint type is generally
only used if disk space is at a premium. The bigint type should only be used
if the range of the integer type is insufficient, because the latter is
definitely faster.

A few thoughts on this.
1) the use of the word "latter" isn't totally clear, or at least I had
to re-read it to realize former was 'bigint' and latter was 'integer'.
It might just be the style of writing.
2) I'm less than convinced this note belongs in modern documentation,
and set out to test that theory. My full results are below, but the
summary is this: on a 64-bit system, there seems to be only a minimal
measurable performance difference (< 5%) and very little size
difference. In the case of the indexes, the size difference is zero.
This is not true for a 32-bit system (where it is 39% slower), but the
blanket statement doesn't hold true, which is why I'm writing all this
up.

On a final note, the following paragraph also seems like it has
outlived its useful life:

On very minimal operating systems the bigint type might not function
correctly, because it relies on compiler support for eight-byte integers. On
such machines, bigint acts the same as integer, but still takes up eight
bytes of storage. (We are not aware of any modern platform where this is the
case.)

Thanks!
-Dan

Table setup (only difference is type of 'id' column):

Table "public.package_files"
   Column    |          Type          |       Modifiers
--------------+------------------------+------------------------
 id           | integer                | not null
 pkg_id       | integer                | not null
 is_directory | boolean                | not null default false
 directory    | character varying(255) | not null
 filename     | character varying(255) |
Indexes:
   "package_files_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
   "package_files_pkg_id" btree (pkg_id) CLUSTER

Table "public.package_files_int8"
   Column    |          Type          |       Modifiers
--------------+------------------------+------------------------
 id           | bigint                 | not null
 pkg_id       | integer                | not null
 is_directory | boolean                | not null default false
 directory    | character varying(255) | not null
 filename     | character varying(255) |
Indexes:
   "package_files_int8_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
   "package_files_int8_pkg_id" btree (pkg_id) CLUSTER

# select count(*) from package_files;
 2621418
# select count(*) from package_files_int8 ;
 2621418

All runs below were done after issuing a few warm up queries, and both
tables went through a VACUUM/CLUSTER/ANALYZE sequence.

32-bit P4 2.4 GHz (single core). no enabled CPU frequency scaling, 1GB
total ram, shared_buffers 128MB, work_mem 4MB:

            relation             |    size
----------------------------------+------------
 public.package_files_int8        | 239 MB
 public.package_files             | 229 MB
 public.package_files_int8_pkey   | 56 MB
 public.package_files_int8_pkg_id | 45 MB
 public.package_files_pkey        | 45 MB
 public.package_files_pkg_id      | 45 MB

archweb=> \timing on
Timing is on.
archweb=> \t
Showing only tuples.
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 516.558 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 519.720 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 533.330 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 519.095 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 520.253 ms

archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 731.194 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 730.329 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 724.646 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 710.815 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 724.519 ms

64-bit Core2 Quad 2.66 GHz (four core), CPU freq scaling disabled
(performance governor used), 8GB total ram, shared_buffers 128MB,
work_mem 4MB:

            relation             |    size
----------------------------------+------------
 public.package_files_int8        | 245 MB
 public.package_files             | 234 MB
 public.package_files_int8_pkey   | 56 MB
 public.package_files_pkg_id      | 56 MB
 public.package_files_int8_pkg_id | 56 MB
 public.package_files_pkey        | 56 MB

dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 177.078 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 176.109 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 177.478 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 176.639 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 176.453 ms

dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 185.768 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 185.159 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 184.407 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 184.555 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
 119325
Time: 184.290 ms

Overall results:

                      i686                            x86_64
               int4            int8            int4            int8
               516.558         731.194         177.078         185.768
               519.72          730.329         176.109         185.159
               533.33          724.646         177.478         184.407
               519.095         710.815         176.639         184.555
               520.253         724.519         176.453         184.29

Average         521.7912        724.3006        176.7514        184.8358
Stddev          6.6040841681    8.1530512264    0.5359499044
 0.619288059
Ratio                   1.3881042839                    1.0457388173

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#4Bruce Momjian
bruce@momjian.us
In reply to: Dan McGee (#1)
Re: Observation on integer types documentation

I have developed the attached patch based on your observations.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 03:59:20PM -0500, Dan McGee wrote:

Hey everyone,

Reading the docs today, I came across this paragraph
(http://www.postgresql.org/docs/devel/static/datatype-numeric.html#DATATYPE-INT),
which goes back several major versions:

The type integer is the common choice, as it offers the best balance between range, storage size, and performance. The smallint type is generally only used if disk space is at a premium. The bigint type should only be used if the range of the integer type is insufficient, because the latter is definitely faster.

A few thoughts on this.
1) the use of the word "latter" isn't totally clear, or at least I had
to re-read it to realize former was 'bigint' and latter was 'integer'.
It might just be the style of writing.
2) I'm less than convinced this note belongs in modern documentation,
and set out to test that theory. My full results are below, but the
summary is this: on a 64-bit system, there seems to be only a minimal
measurable performance difference (< 5%) and very little size
difference. In the case of the indexes, the size difference is zero.
This is not true for a 32-bit system (where it is 39% slower), but the
blanket statement doesn't hold true, which is why I'm writing all this
up.

On a final note, the following paragraph also seems like it has
outlived its useful life:

On very minimal operating systems the bigint type might not function correctly, because it relies on compiler support for eight-byte integers. On such machines, bigint acts the same as integer, but still takes up eight bytes of storage. (We are not aware of any modern platform where this is the case.)

Thanks!
-Dan

Table setup (only difference is type of 'id' column):

Table "public.package_files"
Column | Type | Modifiers
--------------+------------------------+------------------------
id | integer | not null
pkg_id | integer | not null
is_directory | boolean | not null default false
directory | character varying(255) | not null
filename | character varying(255) |
Indexes:
"package_files_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
"package_files_pkg_id" btree (pkg_id) CLUSTER

Table "public.package_files_int8"
Column | Type | Modifiers
--------------+------------------------+------------------------
id | bigint | not null
pkg_id | integer | not null
is_directory | boolean | not null default false
directory | character varying(255) | not null
filename | character varying(255) |
Indexes:
"package_files_int8_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
"package_files_int8_pkg_id" btree (pkg_id) CLUSTER

# select count(*) from package_files;
2621418
# select count(*) from package_files_int8 ;
2621418

All runs below were done after issuing a few warm up queries, and both
tables went through a VACUUM/CLUSTER/ANALYZE sequence.

32-bit P4 2.4 GHz (single core). no enabled CPU frequency scaling, 1GB
total ram, shared_buffers 128MB, work_mem 4MB:

relation | size
----------------------------------+------------
public.package_files_int8 | 239 MB
public.package_files | 229 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkey | 56 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkg_id | 45 MB
public.package_files_pkey | 45 MB
public.package_files_pkg_id | 45 MB

archweb=> \timing on
Timing is on.
archweb=> \t
Showing only tuples.
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 516.558 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 519.720 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 533.330 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 519.095 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 520.253 ms

archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 731.194 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 730.329 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 724.646 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 710.815 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 724.519 ms

64-bit Core2 Quad 2.66 GHz (four core), CPU freq scaling disabled
(performance governor used), 8GB total ram, shared_buffers 128MB,
work_mem 4MB:

relation | size
----------------------------------+------------
public.package_files_int8 | 245 MB
public.package_files | 234 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkey | 56 MB
public.package_files_pkg_id | 56 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkg_id | 56 MB
public.package_files_pkey | 56 MB

dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 177.078 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.109 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 177.478 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.639 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.453 ms

dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 185.768 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 185.159 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.407 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.555 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.290 ms

Overall results:

i686 x86_64
int4 int8 int4 int8
516.558 731.194 177.078 185.768
519.72 730.329 176.109 185.159
533.33 724.646 177.478 184.407
519.095 710.815 176.639 184.555
520.253 724.519 176.453 184.29

Average 521.7912 724.3006 176.7514 184.8358
Stddev 6.6040841681 8.1530512264 0.5359499044 0.619288059
Ratio 1.3881042839 1.0457388173

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--
Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> http://momjian.us
EnterpriseDB http://enterprisedb.com

+ It's impossible for everything to be true. +

Attachments:

bigint.difftext/x-diff; charset=us-asciiDownload+14-14
#5Bruce Momjian
bruce@momjian.us
In reply to: Bruce Momjian (#4)
Re: Observation on integer types documentation

On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 06:38:47PM -0400, Bruce Momjian wrote:

I have developed the attached patch based on your observations.

Applied.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 03:59:20PM -0500, Dan McGee wrote:

Hey everyone,

Reading the docs today, I came across this paragraph
(http://www.postgresql.org/docs/devel/static/datatype-numeric.html#DATATYPE-INT),
which goes back several major versions:

The type integer is the common choice, as it offers the best balance between range, storage size, and performance. The smallint type is generally only used if disk space is at a premium. The bigint type should only be used if the range of the integer type is insufficient, because the latter is definitely faster.

A few thoughts on this.
1) the use of the word "latter" isn't totally clear, or at least I had
to re-read it to realize former was 'bigint' and latter was 'integer'.
It might just be the style of writing.
2) I'm less than convinced this note belongs in modern documentation,
and set out to test that theory. My full results are below, but the
summary is this: on a 64-bit system, there seems to be only a minimal
measurable performance difference (< 5%) and very little size
difference. In the case of the indexes, the size difference is zero.
This is not true for a 32-bit system (where it is 39% slower), but the
blanket statement doesn't hold true, which is why I'm writing all this
up.

On a final note, the following paragraph also seems like it has
outlived its useful life:

On very minimal operating systems the bigint type might not function correctly, because it relies on compiler support for eight-byte integers. On such machines, bigint acts the same as integer, but still takes up eight bytes of storage. (We are not aware of any modern platform where this is the case.)

Thanks!
-Dan

Table setup (only difference is type of 'id' column):

Table "public.package_files"
Column | Type | Modifiers
--------------+------------------------+------------------------
id | integer | not null
pkg_id | integer | not null
is_directory | boolean | not null default false
directory | character varying(255) | not null
filename | character varying(255) |
Indexes:
"package_files_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
"package_files_pkg_id" btree (pkg_id) CLUSTER

Table "public.package_files_int8"
Column | Type | Modifiers
--------------+------------------------+------------------------
id | bigint | not null
pkg_id | integer | not null
is_directory | boolean | not null default false
directory | character varying(255) | not null
filename | character varying(255) |
Indexes:
"package_files_int8_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (id)
"package_files_int8_pkg_id" btree (pkg_id) CLUSTER

# select count(*) from package_files;
2621418
# select count(*) from package_files_int8 ;
2621418

All runs below were done after issuing a few warm up queries, and both
tables went through a VACUUM/CLUSTER/ANALYZE sequence.

32-bit P4 2.4 GHz (single core). no enabled CPU frequency scaling, 1GB
total ram, shared_buffers 128MB, work_mem 4MB:

relation | size
----------------------------------+------------
public.package_files_int8 | 239 MB
public.package_files | 229 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkey | 56 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkg_id | 45 MB
public.package_files_pkey | 45 MB
public.package_files_pkg_id | 45 MB

archweb=> \timing on
Timing is on.
archweb=> \t
Showing only tuples.
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 516.558 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 519.720 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 533.330 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 519.095 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 520.253 ms

archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 731.194 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 730.329 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 724.646 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 710.815 ms
archweb=> select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 724.519 ms

64-bit Core2 Quad 2.66 GHz (four core), CPU freq scaling disabled
(performance governor used), 8GB total ram, shared_buffers 128MB,
work_mem 4MB:

relation | size
----------------------------------+------------
public.package_files_int8 | 245 MB
public.package_files | 234 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkey | 56 MB
public.package_files_pkg_id | 56 MB
public.package_files_int8_pkg_id | 56 MB
public.package_files_pkey | 56 MB

dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 177.078 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.109 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 177.478 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.639 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 176.453 ms

dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 185.768 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 185.159 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.407 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.555 ms
dmcgee=# select count(*) from (select * from package_files_int8 where
pkg_id in (48024, 48025, 40343) order by id) a;
119325
Time: 184.290 ms

Overall results:

i686 x86_64
int4 int8 int4 int8
516.558 731.194 177.078 185.768
519.72 730.329 176.109 185.159
533.33 724.646 177.478 184.407
519.095 710.815 176.639 184.555
520.253 724.519 176.453 184.29

Average 521.7912 724.3006 176.7514 184.8358
Stddev 6.6040841681 8.1530512264 0.5359499044 0.619288059
Ratio 1.3881042839 1.0457388173

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--
Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> http://momjian.us
EnterpriseDB http://enterprisedb.com

+ It's impossible for everything to be true. +

diff --git a/doc/src/sgml/datatype.sgml b/doc/src/sgml/datatype.sgml
new file mode 100644
index 7f6e661..71cf59e
*** a/doc/src/sgml/datatype.sgml
--- b/doc/src/sgml/datatype.sgml
***************
*** 453,470 ****
The type <type>integer</type> is the common choice, as it offers
the best balance between range, storage size, and performance.
The <type>smallint</type> type is generally only used if disk
!      space is at a premium.  The <type>bigint</type> type should only
!      be used if the range of the <type>integer</type> type is insufficient,
!      because the latter is definitely faster.
!     </para>
! 
!     <para>
!      On very minimal operating systems the <type>bigint</type> type
!      might not function correctly, because it relies on compiler support
!      for eight-byte integers.  On such machines, <type>bigint</type>
!      acts the same as <type>integer</type>, but still takes up eight
!      bytes of storage.  (We are not aware of any modern
!      platform where this is the case.)
</para>
<para>
--- 453,460 ----
The type <type>integer</type> is the common choice, as it offers
the best balance between range, storage size, and performance.
The <type>smallint</type> type is generally only used if disk
!      space is at a premium.  The <type>bigint</type> type is designed to be
!      used when the range of the <type>integer</type> type is insufficient.
</para>

<para>

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--
Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> http://momjian.us
EnterpriseDB http://enterprisedb.com

+ It's impossible for everything to be true. +