Berkeley DB Reference Guide:
Berkeley DB Transactional Data Store Applications

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Transaction tuning

There are a few different issues to consider when tuning the performance of Berkeley DB transactional applications. First, you should review Access method tuning, as the tuning issues for access method applications are applicable to transactional applications as well. The following are additional tuning issues for Berkeley DB transactional applications:

access method
Highly concurrent applications should use the Queue access method, where possible, as it provides finer-granularity of locking than the other access methods. Otherwise, applications usually see better concurrency when using the Btree access method than when using either the Hash or Recno access methods.

record numbers
Using record numbers outside of the Queue access method will often slow down concurrent applications as they limit the degree of concurrency available in the database. Using the Recno access method, or the Btree access method with retrieval by record number configured can slow applications down.

Btree database size
When using the Btree access method, applications supporting concurrent access may see excessive numbers of deadlocks in small databases. There are two different approaches to resolving this problem. First, as the Btree access method uses page-level locking, decreasing the database page size can result in fewer lock conflicts. Second, in the case of databases that are cyclically growing and shrinking, turning off reverse splits can leave the database with enough pages that there will be fewer lock conflicts.

transactionally protected read operations
Most applications do not need repeatable reads. Performing all read operations outside of transactions can often significantly increase application throughput. In addition, limiting the lifetime of non-transactional cursors will reduce the length of times locks are held, thereby improving concurrency.

DB_DIRTY_READ
Consider using the DB_DIRTY_READ flag for transactions, cursors or individual read operations. This flag allows read operations to potentially return data which has been modified but not yet committed, and can significantly increase application throughput in applications that do not require data be guaranteed to be permanent in the database.

DB_RMW
Consider using the DB_RMW flag to immediate acquire write locks when reading data items that will subsequently be modified. Although this flag may increase contention (because write locks are held longer than they would otherwise be), it may decrease the number of deadlocks that occur.

DB_TXN_NOSYNC
By default, transactional commit in Berkeley DB implies durability, that is, all committed operations will be present in the database after recovery from any application or system failure. For applications not requiring that level of certainty, specifying the DB_TXN_NOSYNC flag will often provide a significant performance improvement. In this case, the database will still be fully recoverable, but some number of committed transactions might be lost after system failure.

large key/data items
Transactional protections in Berkeley DB are guaranteed by before and after physical image logging. This means applications modifying large key/data items also write large log records, and, in the case of the default transaction commit, threads of control must wait until those log records have been flushed to disk. Applications supporting concurrent access should try and keep key/data items small wherever possible.

log buffer size
Berkeley DB internally maintains a buffer of log writes. The buffer is written to disk at transaction commit, by default, or, whenever it is filled. If it is consistently being filled before transaction commit, it will be written multiple times per transaction, costing application performance. In these cases, increasing the size of the log buffer can increase application throughput.

trickle write
In some applications, the cache is sufficiently active and dirty that readers frequently need to write a dirty page in order to have space in which to read a new page from the backing database file. You can use the db_stat utility (or the statistics returned by the memp_stat function) to see how often this is happening in your application's cache. In this case, using a separate thread of control and the memp_trickle interface to trickle-write pages can often increase the overall throughput of the application.

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