Relational database systems have traditionally optimized for I/O performance and organized
records sequentially on disk pages using the N-ary Storage Model (NSM) (a.k.a., slotted pages).
Recent research, however, indicates that cache utilization and performance is becoming increasingly important on modern platforms. In this paper, we first demonstrate that in-page data placement is the key to high cache performance and that NSM exhibits low cache utilization on modern
platforms. Next, we propose a new data organization model called PAX (Partition Attributes
Across), that significantly improves cache performance by grouping together all values of each
attribute within each page. Because PAX only affects layout inside the pages, it incurs no storage
penalty and does not affect I/O behavior. According to our experimental results (which were
obtained without using any indices on the participating relations), when compared to NSM (a)
PAX exhibits superior cache and memory bandwidth utilization, saving at least 75% of NSM’s stall
time due to data cache accesses, (b) range selection queries and updates on memory-resident relations execute 17-25% faster, and (c) TPC-H queries involving I/O execute 11-48% faster. Finally,
we show that PAX performs well across different memory system designs.
2021-03-30 18:01:40
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