Benchmarking Overview

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CockroachDB delivers predictable throughput and latency at all scales on commodity hardware. This page provides an overview of the performance profiles you can expect, based on Cockroach Labs's extensive testing using industry-standard benchmarks like TPC-C and Sysbench.

For instructions to reproduce the TPC-C results listed here, see Performance Benchmarking with TPC-C. If you fail to achieve similar results, there is likely a problem in either the hardware, workload, or test design.

Tip:

This document is about CockroachDB performance on benchmarks. For guidance on tuning real workloads, see SQL Best Practices, and for guidance on data location techniques to minimize network latency, see Topology Patterns.

Scale

TPC-C provides the most realistic and objective measure for OLTP performance at various scale factors. During testing, CockroachDB v21.1 processed 1.68M tpmC with 140,000 warehouses, resulting in an efficiency score of 95%. As shown in the following chart, this was a 40% improvement over the results from CockroachDB 19.2.

For a refresher on what exactly TPC-C is and how it is measured, see Benchmarks used.

CockroachDB achieves this performance in SERIALIZABLE isolation, the strongest isolation level in the SQL standard.

TPC-C 140,000

Metric CockroachDB 19.2 CockroachDB 21.1
Max warehouses with max efficiency (warehouses) 100,000 140,000
Max throughput (tpmC) 1,245,462 1,684,437
Efficiency (%) 98.81 95.45
Max number of rows (billion) 49.8 69.7
Max unreplicated data (TB) 8 11.2
Number of nodes 81 81

Linear scaling

CockroachDB has no theoretical scaling limit and, in practice, can achieve near-linear performance at 256 nodes. Because the TPC-C results reflect leaps in scale, to test linear scaling, Cockroach Labs ran a simple benchmark named KV 95 (95% point reads, 5% point writes, all uniformly distributed) on AWS c5d.4xlarge machines:

CRDB Linear Scale

This chart shows that adding nodes increases throughput linearly while holding p50 and p99 latency constant. The concurrency for each scale was chosen to optimize throughput while maintaining an acceptable latency and can be observed in the following table.

Number of nodes Workers Concurrency
16 2 512
32 4 512
64 4 1024
128 8 1024
256 8 2048

Throughput

Cockroach Labs believes TPC-C provides the most realistic and objective measure for OLTP throughput. In the real world, applications generate transactional workloads that consist of a combination of reads and writes, possibly with concurrency and likely without all data being loaded into memory. If you see benchmark results quoted in QPS, take them with a grain of salt, because anything as simple as a “query” is unlikely to be representative of the workload you need to run in practice.

With that in mind, however, you can use Sysbench for straight-forward throughput benchmarking. For example, on a 3-node cluster of AWS c5d.9xlarge machines across AWS’s us-east-1 region (availability zones a, b, and c), CockroachDB can achieve 118,000 inserts per second on the oltp_insert workload and 336,000 reads per second on the oltp_point_select workload. We used a concurrency of 480 on the oltp_insert workload and a concurrency of 216 on the oltp_point_select workload to generate these numbers.

Sysbench Throughput

Latency

CockroachDB returns single-row reads in 1 ms and processes single-row writes in 2 ms within a single availability zone. As you expand out to multiple availability zones or multiple regions, latency can increase due to distance and the limitation of the speed of light.

For benchmarking latency, again, Cockroach Labs believes TPC-C provides the most realistic and objective measure, since it encompasses the latency distribution, including tail performance. However, you can use Sysbench for straight-forward latency benchmarking.

For example, when running Sysbench on a 3-node cluster of AWS c5d.9xlarge machines across AWS us-east-1 region (availability zones a, b, and c), CockroachDB can achieve an average of 4.3ms on the oltp_insert workload and 0.7ms on the oltp_point_select workload.

Sysbench Latency

CockroachDB provides a number of important tuning practices for both single-region and multi-region deployments, including secondary indexes and various data topologies to achieve low latency.

Benchmarks used

TPC-C

Cockroach Labs measures performance through many diverse tests, including the industry-standard OLTP benchmark TPC-C, which simulates an e-commerce or retail company. Created in 1992, TPC-C has withstood the test of time and remains the most mature industry benchmark for OLTP workloads, and the only objective comparison for evaluating OLTP performance. In its own words, TPC-C:

“…involves a mix of five concurrent transactions of different types and complexity either executed on-line or queued for deferred execution. The database is comprised of nine types of tables with a wide range of record and population sizes. While the benchmark portrays the activity of a wholesale supplier, TPC-C is not limited to the activity of any particular business segment, but, rather represents any industry that must manage, sell, or distribute a product or service.”

As a result, TPC-C includes create, read, update, and delete (e.g., CRUD) queries, basic joins, and other SQL statements used to administer mission-critical transactional workloads. It includes detailed specifications for concurrency and workload contention.

How TPC-C works

TPC-C measures the throughput and latency for processing sales through a customer warehouse using a “business throughput” metric called tpmC that measures the number of order transactions performed per minute throughout the system. This metric is considerably more realistic than TPS (transactions per second) or QPS (queries per second) alone because it summarizes multiple transactions per order and accounts for failed transactions. TPC-C also has several latency requirements that apply to median, p90, and max latencies.

TPC-C specifies restrictions on the maximum throughput achievable per warehouse. This is done to ensure that as a system becomes progressively more capable of throughput, it must also deal with progressively more data. This is how things work in the real world, and it makes little sense to say that your database can process a bazillion transactions per second if it’s processing the same data over and over again.

Because TPC-C is constrained to a maximum amount of throughput per warehouse, we often discuss TPC-C performance as the maximum number of warehouses for which a database can maintain the maximum throughput per minute. For a full description of the benchmark, see TPC BENCHMARK™ C Standard Specification Revision 5.11.

Sysbench

Sysbench is a popular tool that allows for basic throughput and latency testing. Cockroach Labs prefers the more complex TPC-C, but Sysbench’s oltp_insert and oltp_point_select workloads are reasonable alternatives for understanding basic throughput and latency across different databases.

Performance limitations

CockroachDB has no theoretical limitations to scaling, throughput, latency, or concurrency other than the speed of light.

See also

  • Hardware

    CockroachDB works well on commodity hardware in public cloud, private cloud, on-prem, and hybrid environments. For hardware recommendations, see our Production Checklist.

    Cockroach Labs creates a yearly cloud report focused on evaluating hardware performance. For more information, see the 2022 Cloud Report.

  • Performance tuning

    For guidance on tuning a real workload's performance, see SQL Best Practices, and for guidance on techniques to minimize network latency in multi-region or global clusters, see Multi-Region Capabilities Overview.

  • TPC-C replication instructions

    For instructions showing how to replicate the TPC-C results described in this page, see Performance Benchmarking with TPC-C.


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