Dimitri Kravtchuk
Guest
As you already know, a new MySQL-8.0 milestone release is available (and hope you did not miss all the news coming from MySQL Server Team site - starting by what's new article and followed by many others (and you'll see yet more to come ;-))..
There are also many good changes improving overall MySQL 8.0 Performance. However to see a real boost on OLTP workloads you'll need to have little bit more of patience.. -- we're attacking InnoDB fundamentals.. -- the parts of design which are probably remained mostly unchanged since InnoDB creation ;-)) -- you can easily understand that such a work has a long road from idea/ prototype to a final release.. On the same time our "Preview" results are looking very encouraging, and I'll be happy to say you more about during my talk @PerconaLive, 27/Apr 1:50pm :
- https://www.percona.com/live/17/sessions/mysql-80-performance-scalability-benchmarks
to give you a first idea about what is coming, I'll post here a singe "teaser" graph about a pure UPDATE performance on 22cores-HT (1CPU socket), then 44cores-HT server (2CPU sockets (kind of today's "commodity" HW ;-)) -- the graph is taken from the results comparing MySQL 5.7 vs current 8.0 vs 8.0-dev (which is yet in dev progress), but instead of TPS/QPS you can see here just levels about InnoDB internal contentions :
Your browser is not supporting SVG..
to help you little bit to find the diff within these graphs, in short :
If it's saying you something, you could already get a first idea about what kind of TPS boost you may expect and what kind of possibilities it opens.. ;-) -- but if not, don't worry.. -- I'll tell you all this during my talk in 2 weeks ;-)
(yes, slides will be published, no worry; and yes, this article will be also updated with more details)
until then, stay tuned.. ;-))
And THANK YOU for using MySQL !!!
Rgds,
-Dimitri
Читать дальше...
There are also many good changes improving overall MySQL 8.0 Performance. However to see a real boost on OLTP workloads you'll need to have little bit more of patience.. -- we're attacking InnoDB fundamentals.. -- the parts of design which are probably remained mostly unchanged since InnoDB creation ;-)) -- you can easily understand that such a work has a long road from idea/ prototype to a final release.. On the same time our "Preview" results are looking very encouraging, and I'll be happy to say you more about during my talk @PerconaLive, 27/Apr 1:50pm :
- https://www.percona.com/live/17/sessions/mysql-80-performance-scalability-benchmarks
to give you a first idea about what is coming, I'll post here a singe "teaser" graph about a pure UPDATE performance on 22cores-HT (1CPU socket), then 44cores-HT server (2CPU sockets (kind of today's "commodity" HW ;-)) -- the graph is taken from the results comparing MySQL 5.7 vs current 8.0 vs 8.0-dev (which is yet in dev progress), but instead of TPS/QPS you can see here just levels about InnoDB internal contentions :
Your browser is not supporting SVG..
to help you little bit to find the diff within these graphs, in short :
- yes, log_sys contention is gone in MySQL 8.0-dev ;-)
- and log_write too..
- and trx_sys..
- and lock_sys..
- and...
If it's saying you something, you could already get a first idea about what kind of TPS boost you may expect and what kind of possibilities it opens.. ;-) -- but if not, don't worry.. -- I'll tell you all this during my talk in 2 weeks ;-)
(yes, slides will be published, no worry; and yes, this article will be also updated with more details)
until then, stay tuned.. ;-))
And THANK YOU for using MySQL !!!
Rgds,
-Dimitri
Читать дальше...