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Currently i have this server

processor   : 3
vendor_id   : GenuineIntel
cpu family  : 15
model       : 2
model name  : Intel(R) Xeon(TM) CPU 2.40GHz
stepping    : 9
cpu MHz     : 2392.149
cache size  : 512 KB

My application cause more 96% of cpu usage to MySQL with 200-300 transactions per seconds. Can anyone assist, provide links me on how

  • to do benchmark to PostgreSQL
  • do you think PostgreSQL can improve CPU utilization instead of MySQL
  • links , wiki that simply present the benchmark comparison
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  • How much RAM does the server have? what are the disk(s)? is it a virtual server, or is that a real CPU you have non-time-shared access to? Jun 28, 2012 at 3:52

1 Answer 1

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A common misconception for database users is that high CPU use is bad.

It isn't.

A database has exactly one speed: as fast as possible. It will always use up every resource it can, within administrator set limits, to execute your queries quickly.

Most queries require lots more of one particular resource than others. For most queries on bigger databases that resource is disk I/O, so the database will be thrashing your storage as fast as it can. While it is waiting for the hard drive it usually can't do any other work, so that thread/process will go to sleep and stop using the CPU.

Smaller databases, or queries on small datasets within big databases, often fit entirely in RAM. The operating system will cache the data from disk and have it sitting in RAM and ready to return when the database asks for it. This means the database isn't waiting for the disk and being forced to sleep, so it goes all-out processing the data with the CPU to get you your answers quickly.

There are two reasons you might care about CPU use:

  • You have something else running on that machine that isn't getting enough CPU time; or
  • You think that given the 100% cpu use you aren't getting enough performance from your database

For the first point, don't blame the database. It's an admin issue. Set operating system scheduler controls like nice levels to re-prioritize the workload - or get a bigger server that can do all the work you require of it without falling behind.

For the second point you need to look at your database tuning, at your queries, etc. It's not a "database uses 100% cpu" problem, it's a "I'm not getting enough throughput and seem to be CPU-bound" problem. Database and query tuning is a big topic and not one I'll get into here, especially since I don't generally use MySQL.

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  • hi craig, thanks for the reply. No other app running more than 1% of the CPU. Yes , i follow standard MySQL tuning, doing the cache query and other things. The answer to a bigger server is a YES, but that will not be in 3 months time. I just want to know whether i can utilize current resource to its limit with other RDBMS or do some code tuning. Jun 28, 2012 at 16:06
  • OK, so your problem isn't high CPU usage. It's that you want more throughput than you are getting, and you are currently bottlenecked on CPU. @pakcikkantin Jun 29, 2012 at 2:48
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    @pakcikkantin I can't really help you with the tuning part; I focus almost entirely on PostgreSQL. If it's anything like PostgreSQL then adding a connection pool to limit the number of concurrent connections fighting for resources should make things go quite a lot faster if you have lots of concurrent queries. Beyond that, I suggest posting a better question with details on your workload, your queries, EXPLAIN output, your RAM and database sizes, etc; all the things someone will need to know to actually help you tune. Try the MySQL forums; probably better than here for tuning. Jun 29, 2012 at 2:50
  • Hi craig, i believe and found out that the transaction had very little time wait to do any transactions which is around 500ms. With that very small CPU and low IO throughput, i believe that server cannot handle that fast RDBMS transactions. Therefore i have increased the elapsed time for each threads to 1 second. Thanks again for the replies. The answer is surely to upgrade the server. Jul 2, 2012 at 8:58
  • @pakcikkantin Heh, the answer is rarely purely to upgrade the server. Batching, doing more work in fewer queries, etc can make a huge difference. Also, remember that task switching costs show up as CPU; just because your DB is using lots of CPU doesn't mean its doing it to do productive work. You might need fewer DB threads/procs - even if they aren't waiting, they're still contending for resources. Particularly if you don't have a big CPU, consider limiting concurrently executing queries to between 2 and 8 using a connection pool to queue 'em up. Jul 3, 2012 at 3:10

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