Comment by senderista

2 days ago

How is pwrite/fsync any better than mmap/msync? Both go through the page cache and combine asynchronous writeback with forced flush. One theoretical advantage of pwrite might be that you can handle I/O errors, but I’d like to see a case where recovering from an I/O error makes sense (rather than just crashing the database, which SIGBUS would do anyway by default).

write/fsync can be faster in a large dataset because writes let the filesystem know an explicit list of dirty pages, so fsync only needs to deal with them.

mmap/msync gives no hints about which pages are dirty (unless the app tracks them itself and msyncs them individually, which would completely defeat any reduced syscall advantage of using a writable mmap in the first place) so the entire map must be scanned for dirty pages.

In practice, the expected performance advantages of using a writable mmap just aren't there, and coupled with the ease of silent corruption, it's best to never use that approach.