this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2023
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Lemmy Server Performance
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Lemmy Server Performance
lemmy_server uses the Diesel ORM that automatically generates SQL statements. There are serious performance problems in June and July 2023 preventing Lemmy from scaling. Topics include caching, PostgreSQL extensions for troubleshooting, Client/Server Code/SQL Data/server operator apps/sever operator API (performance and storage monitoring), etc.
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Speaking of language overhead, pg_stat_statements shows ~~this particular SELECT statement returning almost 2000 rows per execution (if I'm interpreting the row count correctly).~~
EDIT, NEVERMIND: if I actually divided in my head, it is 184 rows per query, which I think is the default number of languages installed on a lemmy instance. so 184 rows isn't the wild 2000 number I thoughtlessly estimated.
The statement has been executed 1313 times, that number is far lower than the 3000 comment INSERT statements, so it isn't per comment. I have 803 + 703 INSERT into the post table, so that doesn't match.
Oh, ok, 186 times a similar SELECT is being run that has a high number of rows returned per execution:
1313 + 186 = 1499. 803 + 703 = 1506 post inserts (there may be more variations of each statement). It could be once per post INSERT?
I suspect these two SQL statements are supposed to have a WHERE site_id clause on them. Can someone help identify in the Rust code why incoming federation of comments/posts is running this query over and over, but not per-comment or per-post, but something less?
I haven't found where 1499 executions in the time period would be accounted for, but I did notice some suspect logic in the Rust code regarding edit/creation of a community: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/blob/main/crates/api_crud/src/community/update.rs#L44
This seems to not specify a site_id when loading the languages, that would return all rows in the table.