Abstract

As information processing applications take greater roles in our everyday life, database management systems (DBMSs) are growing in importance. DBMSs have traditionally exhibited poor cache performance and large memory footprints, therefore performing only at a fraction of their ideal execution and exhibiting low processor utilization. Previous research has studied the memory system of DBMSs on research-based simultaneous multithreading (SMT) processors. Recently, several differences have been noted between the real hyper-threaded architecture implemented by the Intel Pentium 4 and the earlier SMT research architectures. This paper characterizes the performance of a prototype open-source DBMS running TPC-equivalent benchmark queries on an Intel Pentium 4 Hyper-Threading processor. We use hardware counters provided by the Pentium 4 to evaluate the micro-architecture and study the memory system behavior of each query running on the DBMS. Our results show a performance improvement of up to 1.16 in TPC-C-equivalent and 1.26 in TPC-H-equivalent queries due to hyperthreading.

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