Hi, Thanks for the reply.
Here are the details of my test setup. I ran the tests on Debian Linux (6.1.0-10-amd64, x86_64) on an AMD Ryzen 5 7535U (6 cores / 12 threads). The PostgreSQL version was 19devel, built from source using gcc 12.2.0 with enable-debug. For benchmarking, I used pgbench with the following command: pgbench -p 55432 -d postgres -c 10 -j 4 -T 60 The database was initialized with scale factor 1 (pgbench -i). I ran multiple iterations for both the original and patched versions and compared TPS and latency across runs. All tests were done on the same system under similar conditions. Please let me know if you’d like me to try any other scenarios or provide more details. Regards, Lakshmi G On Fri, Mar 20, 2026 at 4:28 PM Ranier Vilela <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi. > > Em sex., 20 de mar. de 2026 às 06:50, lakshmi <[email protected]> > escreveu: > >> Hi, >> >> I tried this change on PostgreSQL (19devel) and ran a few simple tests >> using pgbench to see how it behaves in practice. >> >> I used 10 clients and 4 threads and ran each test for 60 seconds. >> >> From my runs, the original version was giving around ~663 TPS with ~15.07 >> ms latency. >> With the patched version, I observed TPS in the range of ~638–657, >> averaging around ~648 TPS, with latency slightly higher (~15.2–15.6 ms). >> > Thanks for the benchmark. > Could you share the tests and the environment? > compiler > OS > etc. > > best regards, > Ranier Vilela >
