Refactor: standard install/start/check/stop/load/query interface per system#860
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alexey-milovidov wants to merge 150 commits intomainfrom
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Refactor: standard install/start/check/stop/load/query interface per system#860alexey-milovidov wants to merge 150 commits intomainfrom
alexey-milovidov wants to merge 150 commits intomainfrom
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…/data-size
Each local system now exposes a small set of single-purpose scripts with a
stable contract, so they can be driven by a shared lib/benchmark-common.sh
and reused by external tooling (e.g. an online "run query against system X"
service):
install env prep + system install (idempotent)
start start daemon (idempotent; empty for stateless tools)
check trivial query, exit 0 iff responsive
stop stop daemon (idempotent)
load runs create.sql + loads data, deletes source files, sync
query SQL on stdin; result on stdout; runtime in fractional seconds
on the last line of stderr; non-zero exit on error
data-size prints data footprint in bytes (one integer to stdout)
Each system's old monolithic benchmark.sh is replaced by a 4-line shim that
sets a couple of env vars (BENCH_DOWNLOAD_SCRIPT, BENCH_RESTARTABLE) and
exec's lib/benchmark-common.sh. The shared driver runs the unified flow:
install -> start+check -> download -> load (timed) -> for each query
{flush caches; optionally stop+start to neutralize warm-process effects;
run query 3x} -> data-size -> stop. Output format ([t1,t2,t3], Load time,
Data size) matches the previous benchmark.sh exactly so cloud-init.sh.in's
log POST to play.clickhouse.com keeps working unchanged.
For dataframe/in-process systems (pandas, polars-dataframe, chdb-dataframe,
daft-parquet*, duckdb-dataframe, sirius), the engine is wrapped in a small
FastAPI server (server.py) so the start/stop/query interface still applies.
BENCH_RESTARTABLE=no for these (and for embedded CLIs like duckdb, sqlite,
datafusion, etc.) since restarting a single Python/CLI process between
queries would dominate query time.
Scope: 88 local systems refactored. Cloud/managed systems and a handful of
non-functional ones (csvq, dsq, locustdb, mongodb, polars CLI, exasol,
spark-velox) are intentionally left untouched.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Resolves conflict in clickhouse-datalake{,-partitioned}: upstream switched
the datalake variants from filesystem-cache to userspace page-cache (PR #818).
The refactored install/query scripts now adopt the page-cache approach.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
mongodb: query takes a MongoDB aggregation pipeline (Extended JSON, one line) on stdin instead of SQL — these are the same canonical 43 ClickBench queries, just expressed as mongo pipelines. queries.txt is generated from queries.js (the source of truth) by replacing JS-only constructors (NumberLong, ISODate, NumberDecimal) with their EJSON canonical form. The shim sets BENCH_QUERIES_FILE=queries.txt to point the driver at it. polars: wrapped in a FastAPI server analogous to polars-dataframe, but the load step uses pl.scan_parquet (LazyFrame) so the parquet file remains needed at query time — the load script does NOT delete hits.parquet. data-size returns the on-disk parquet size since a LazyFrame has no materialized in-memory size. Both systems now expose the standard install/start/check/stop/load/query/ data-size scripts and a 4-line benchmark.sh shim, removing the old benchmark.sh / run.js / query.py / formatResult.js paths. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
alexey-milovidov
commented
May 7, 2026
…use in query Per review: clickhouse-local persists table metadata in its --path dir, so the CREATE TABLE only needs to run once during ./load. ./query just runs the query against the persisted table. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
alexey-milovidov
commented
May 7, 2026
alexey-milovidov
commented
May 7, 2026
…atively Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
… readiness Per review (alexey-milovidov): clickhouse start leaves the system in the desired state (server running) even when it returns non-zero with "already running". Make the shared driver tolerate non-zero from ./start and rely on bench_check_loop as the authoritative readiness signal. This lets per-system start scripts stay simple — they just need to make a best-effort attempt to launch. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
prmoore77
added a commit
to gizmodata/ClickBench
that referenced
this pull request
May 7, 2026
…ouse#860) Adopts the per-system 7-script interface from ClickHouse#860 for gizmosql/, and replaces the Java sqlline-based gizmosqlline client with the C++ gizmosql_client shell that ships with gizmosql_server. Scripts (matching the contract from lib/benchmark-common.sh): benchmark.sh - 4-line shim that exec's ../lib/benchmark-common.sh install - apt + curl gizmosql_cli_linux_$ARCH.zip; no openjdk, no separate gizmosqlline download start - idempotent server bring-up (skips if port 31337 is open) check - cheap TCP probe (auth-gated SQL would need credentials) stop - kills tracked PID; pkill belt-and-braces fallback load - rm -f clickbench.db, then create.sql + load.sql via gizmosql_client; deletes hits.parquet and sync's query - reads one query from stdin, runs via gizmosql_client with .timer on + .mode trash; emits fractional seconds as the last stderr line (parsed from "Run Time: X.XXs") data-size - wc -c clickbench.db Notes: - BENCH_DOWNLOAD_SCRIPT=download-hits-parquet-single, BENCH_RESTARTABLE=yes (gizmosql is a server, so per-query restart neutralizes warm-process effects, matching the clickhouse/postgres pattern in ClickHouse#860). - util.sh now exports GIZMOSQL_HOST/PORT/USER/PASSWORD - the env vars gizmosql_client reads natively, so query/load can call gizmosql_client with no flags. The server still receives the username via --username. - PID_FILE moved to a stable /tmp path (was /tmp/gizmosql_server_$$.pid, which broke across the start/stop process boundary in the new layout). This PR depends on ClickHouse#860 (which introduces lib/benchmark-common.sh and the contract). Once ClickHouse#860 lands, this PR's diff against main will be only the gizmosql/ files. Validated locally on macOS with gizmosql v1.22.4: the query script produces the expected fractional-seconds last line on stdout/stderr separation, and exits non-zero on error paths. See https://docs.gizmosql.com/#/client for gizmosql_client docs.
2 tasks
Resolves merge conflicts:
- Removed cedardb/run.sh, gizmosql/run.sh — superseded by the standard
query interface; the refactor branch already replaced them.
- Restored datafusion{,-partitioned}/make-json.sh, doris{,-parquet}/get-result-json.sh
with main's dated-results version. These are independent post-run JSON
builders, still referenced from the per-system READMEs.
- Kept the thin benchmark.sh shim in gizmosql/, spark-{auron,comet,gluten}/,
trino/. Per-system result-JSON auto-save (added on main while this branch
was in flight) is intentionally not carried over: under the new interface,
result.csv is the single timing artifact and JSON construction belongs in
separate tooling.
- gizmosql/{install,load,query,util.sh}: merge auto-took main's switch from
gizmosqlline (Java) to gizmosql_client (CLI shipped with the server),
but the refactor branch's load/query still referenced GIZMOSQL_SERVER_URI
and GIZMOSQL_USERNAME. Updated install to drop openjdk + gizmosqlline,
load to use gizmosql_client (and stop the server first to release the
database file), and query to drive gizmosql_client with .timer/.mode trash
and parse "Run Time:" instead of "rows selected (... seconds)".
…-system layout These four entries were added on main while this branch was in flight (the existing trino/ scripts here were a memory-connector stub that never worked end-to-end). Rebuild each one against the new install/start/check/stop/load/ query/data-size contract so they share lib/benchmark-common.sh: - trino, trino-partitioned: Hive connector + file metastore + local Parquet hardlinked into data/hits/ (matches main's working impl from PR #856). - trino-datalake{,-partitioned}: same, plus the AnonymousAWSCredentials shim to read clickhouse-public-datasets/hits_compatible/athena from anonymous S3 (the published bucket size is reported by data-size since the data is read on demand). BENCH_DOWNLOAD_SCRIPT="" — no local dataset to fetch. - benchmark.sh in all four becomes a 4-line shim. Old run.sh deleted.
…r-system layout
These four entries were added on main while this branch was in flight.
Adapt them to the install/start/check/stop/load/query/data-size contract:
- presto, presto-partitioned: Hive connector + file metastore + local Parquet
hardlinked into data/hits/.
- presto-datalake{,-partitioned}: same plus the AnonymousAWSCredentials shim
(compiled in a throwaway trinodb/trino container, since the prestodb image
ships only a JRE) so the hive-hadoop2 plugin can read the public bucket
anonymously. BENCH_DOWNLOAD_SCRIPT="" — schema-only load against S3.
Each benchmark.sh becomes a 4-line shim. Old run.sh deleted.
These two entries were added on main while this branch was in flight. Adapt to the install/start/check/stop/load/query/data-size contract: - BENCH_DOWNLOAD_SCRIPT="" — the vortex bench binary fetches Parquet and converts to .vortex on first invocation. - BENCH_RESTARTABLE=no — embedded Rust CLI; per-query restart would dominate query time. - query: stages stdin into a temp queries-file and passes -q 0, since the bench binary addresses queries by index rather than reading SQL on stdin. - The single variant uses the `clickbench` binary (vortex 0.34.0); the partitioned variant uses `query_bench clickbench` (vortex 0.44.0). Old run.sh deleted.
Quickwit was added on main while this branch was in flight. Adapt to the install/start/check/stop/load/query/data-size contract: - BENCH_QUERIES_FILE="queries.json" — Quickwit accepts Elasticsearch-format JSON queries via the /_elastic compat API, not SQL. queries.json holds one ES query per line; queries not expressible in Quickwit are encoded as the literal "null". - BENCH_DOWNLOAD_SCRIPT="" — the load script fetches hits.json.gz directly (there is no shared download-hits-json helper) and pipes it through `quickwit tool local-ingest`, since v0.9's sharded ingest-v2 endpoint caps single-node throughput at a few MB/s. - BENCH_RESTARTABLE=yes — relies on the common driver's per-query restart to flush Quickwit's fast_field_cache and split_footer_cache (the result caches are already disabled in node-config.yaml). - query: returns non-zero for "null" queries so the framework records null in the per-query timing array; otherwise reports .took (ms → seconds). Old run.sh deleted.
The original used /tmp/gizmosql_server_$$.pid where $$ is the calling process's PID. That worked when benchmark.sh sourced util.sh and called start/stop in the same shell, but under the new per-system layout each of start, stop, load, and query sources util.sh in its own subshell — so stop_gizmosql couldn't find the PID file written by start_gizmosql. Use a fixed path under the system directory instead. Also expose wait_for_gizmosql so callers (like load) can wait for readiness without restarting.
Conflict only in gizmosql/benchmark.sh — kept the thin shim. Main switched gizmosql to the official one-line installer (PR #879); fold that into gizmosql/install so we stop hand-detecting arch and downloading the zip. Other changes auto-merged: quickwit/index_config.yaml gained tag_fields on CounterID + record:basic on text fields (PR #886), and assorted result JSONs for ClickHouse Cloud / Citus / Cratedb / etc.
start/stop scripts may emit progress lines (clickhouse-server prints PID table tracking, sudo's chown invocation, postgres's startup messages, etc.). With BENCH_RESTARTABLE=yes those scripts run before every query, so their output interleaves with the parseable [t1,t2,t3] / Load time / Data size lines and breaks the cloud-init log POST to play.clickhouse.com. Redirect both stdout and stderr from ./start and ./stop to /dev/null at the three call sites in lib/benchmark-common.sh. The check loop is the authoritative readiness signal, so losing start's output costs nothing in steady state; for debugging, run ./start manually outside the driver.
The DuckDB installer at install.duckdb.org drops the binary into ~/.duckdb/cli/latest/duckdb and only suggests adding that directory to PATH. Previously each install attempted a per-user symlink into ~/.local/bin, which silently no-ops when that directory isn't on PATH (default for root in cloud-init). The result was ./check failing for 300s with no useful error. Symlink to /usr/local/bin/duckdb via sudo right after install instead; that's on PATH for every user, and the symlink is itself idempotent.
Ubuntu's docker.io ships the docker CLI without the v2 compose plugin, so the existing `command -v docker` short-circuit skipped installation on boxes that already had docker but no `docker compose`. ./start then ran `docker compose up -d`, which silently failed, and ./check timed out at 300s. Fall back to docker-compose-v2 for the Ubuntu package name. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Throughput variant of ClickBench. N connections (default 10) hold open sessions and each picks a uniformly random query from the standard 43-query set; the run goes for a fixed wall-clock window (default 600s) after a warmup. Reports completed queries, QPS, latency p50/p95/p99, and per-query mean. Backends: ClickHouse over HTTP (stdlib http.client), StarRocks over the MySQL wire protocol (pymysql). Each system's recommended path so neither is paying a wire-format penalty the other isn't. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
…ned}/query: pass query via temp file `python3 - <<'PY' ... PY` directs the heredoc into python3's stdin so the interpreter can read its program from there. Once the heredoc is fully consumed, sys.stdin (the same FD) is at EOF — so sys.stdin.read() inside the heredoc returned an empty string, and chdb / hyper / sail dutifully ran the empty query and reported ~0.000s for every try. Stage stdin into a temp file in bash before invoking the heredoc and pass the path as argv[1]; the python script reads the query from that file. Also include result materialization in the timing window for chdb/query and chdb-parquet-partitioned/query (move `end = ...` past fetchall / str(res)) — the timer was previously stopped before the result was realized, which would have under-counted query time even when the stdin bug wasn't masking it entirely.
Right now ./check stderr is silently dropped while the loop retries for 300s, then we report "did not succeed within 300s" with no clue why. For deterministic failures (missing env var like YT_PROXY for chyt, an install step that didn't run, etc.) the user wastes 5 minutes and still has to dig through the per-system check script to find out what happened. Capture the last attempt's stderr and print it on timeout. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The upstream install path assumes RHEL/Rocky/Alma — yum, grubby, SELinux, the wheel group, /data0. On Ubuntu/Debian the prereqs phase silently half-completes (several |||| true skips), the gpadmin user is sometimes not created, and db-install would later die at `yum install -y go`. Either way ./check times out at 300s with no diagnostic. Bail with a clear "needs yum" message before doing anything destructive, and call out the requirement in the README. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Cloud-init runs scripts as root with HOME unset. Tools that follow
XDG-ish conventions then fall over: the GizmoSQL one-line installer
exits at line 32 with "HOME: parameter not set" (it runs under `sh -u`),
duckdb-vortex's `INSTALL vortex` writes to /.duckdb/extensions/... and
later fails to find it ("Extension /.duckdb/extensions/v1.5.2/..."),
and duckdb-datalake{,-partitioned} queries crash 43 times each with
"Can't find the home directory at ''" while autoloading httpfs.
Each affected install script tried to paper over this locally with
`export HOME=${HOME:=~}`, but the export only lives for that script —
the sibling load/query scripts the lib runs in fresh subprocesses still
see HOME unset. Set it once here so every per-system step inherits it.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
apt's monetdb5-sql post-install creates /var/lib/monetdb as the monetdb user's home dir, so the existing `if [ ! -d /var/lib/monetdb ]` guard skipped `monetdbd create` and left the dbfarm uninitialized. ./check then looped 300s on `mclient: cannot connect: control socket does not exist` and the run died. Probe the dbfarm marker file (.merovingian_properties) instead of the directory, and explicitly `monetdbd start` after create — both are idempotent, and a daemon that's already up just no-ops. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
paradedb/paradedb:0.10.0 (the prior pin) was rotated out of Docker Hub — docker pull returned "manifest not found" and ./check timed out. The oldest tags still hosted are 0.15.x, so move both directories onto a real Postgres-version-specific tag (latest-pg17) that paradedb still maintains. This unblocks the image pull. NOTE: paradedb dropped its pg_lakehouse / parquet_fdw extension after 0.10.x (the parquet_fdw_handler() function no longer exists), so create.sql still needs to be reworked away from the foreign-table approach for queries to succeed end-to-end. That's a separate change. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The prior URL (qa-build.oss-cn-beijing.aliyuncs.com selectdb-doris-2.1.7-rc01) returned 404 — SelectDB stopped publishing free standalone tarballs once the product moved fully to a managed-cloud offering. VeloDB (the company that now stewards SelectDB) hosts the official Apache Doris release binaries instead, which are functionally what SelectDB ships today. Pin to the current stable (4.0.5) and use the symmetric $dir_name path layout that doris/install already uses, instead of the hardcoded selectdb-doris-2.1.7 segment. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
…ckHouse/ClickBench into refactor/per-system-script-interface
…ckHouse/ClickBench into refactor/per-system-script-interface
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…ckHouse/ClickBench into refactor/per-system-script-interface
A JSON file of the form {"error": "..."} marks a failed run for that
system/machine; such entries are now excluded from data.generated.js so
the system is omitted from the report.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
- Combine the small filters (Open source, Hardware, Tuned) into a single horizontal row at the top of the selectors table. - Top-row filters now hide options in System / Type / Machine / Cluster size that have no entries satisfying the criteria. - Hovering a system in the System list, a summary row, or a details column header highlights that system's tags in the Type list with a green background (light/dark theme aware). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The stored-theme bootstrap was calling setTheme(), which calls render(), which now references `let systems` via applyTopRowFilters() — throwing a ReferenceError because the binding is still in its temporal dead zone. Set the data-theme attribute directly at bootstrap; the final render() at the end of the script handles the initial render. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The lukewarm-cold-run tag predates the May 7 refactor (1f352ad) when the bench loop didn't reliably restart between queries, so each cold run could re-use a warm process. After the refactor BENCH_RESTARTABLE governs that explicitly: systems either fully restart (with the cache drop landing on an actually-cold process tree thanks to the stop→wait_stopped→drop_caches→start ordering) or sit out at BENCH_RESTARTABLE=no for in-process tools where restart would dominate the timing. Either way the "lukewarm" qualifier no longer applies to results produced under the new driver. Strip the tag from: * every results/2026050[7-9]/*.json and results/20260510/*.json that carried it — 295 files across 29 systems (citus, clickhouse, clickhouse-web, databend, doris, doris-parquet, greenplum, mariadb-columnstore, pg_clickhouse, pg_duckdb-parquet, pg_mooncake, pgpro_tam, polars, polars-dataframe, presto + 3 variants, questdb, siglens, starrocks, timescaledb, trino + 3 variants, ursa, velodb, victorialogs) * template.json of those same 29 systems, so future runs don't re-introduce it. Older results (pre-refactor) keep the tag — they were produced under the historical driver and the attribute is genuine for them. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Firebolt's "wait until ready" loop did
curl -sS http://localhost:3473/ --data-binary 'SELECT ...' \
> /dev/null && break
which exited on the FIRST HTTP response — including the HTTP 200
that carries
{"errors":[{"description":"Cluster not yet healthy: Node startup
is not yet finished"}],
"statistics":{"elapsed":0.0}}
while the container is still warming up. So the bench would proceed
straight to CREATE TABLE, get the same Cluster-not-healthy error, run
all 43 queries (each replying with "elapsed":0.0), and emit a log
that looked fine: 43/43 timing triplets, load_time present, data_size
present.
The sink.parser MV's "good" predicate then rejected the row for
arrayExists(x -> arrayExists(y -> toFloat64OrZero(y) > 0.1, x), runtimes)
— every timing is 0.0, so no element exceeds 0.1, the row never lands
in sink.results, and the website has had no new Firebolt result since
2026-02-21 even though the bench has been "running" successfully.
Pipe the response into grep "Firebolt is ready" and only break when the
sentinel actually appears in the body. Same fix for all three variants
(firebolt, firebolt-parquet, firebolt-parquet-partitioned).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Add the "stateless" tag to all result files and templates of systems that do not maintain persistent state of their own: polars, sail*, spark*, *-parquet, *-datalake. With the recent load-metric filter change, these systems are correctly omitted from the Load Time view. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
- When the Load Time metric is selected, exclude entries tagged "stateless" — they have no meaningful load time. - Hovering a tag in the Type list highlights every summary row and details column header for systems carrying that tag, mirroring the existing system-hover behavior. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Pick up the latest result entries that landed upstream during the stateless-tag rebase. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
…emplate Follow-up to e29ce9e: more post-refactor results have landed since (firebolt finally producing rows, new sweeps on the c6a/c8g/c7a machines for clickhouse-web, databend, citus, presto/trino variants, etc.), and they reinstated the tag. Strip again across every post-refactor result dir for the 68 systems that have at least one results/202605{07-10}/ entry. The firebolt template still carried the tag from before this round (it wasn't touched last time because firebolt had no post-refactor result yet); clear it now that firebolt is back on the dashboard. 189 result files updated, plus firebolt/template.json. Pre-refactor results keep the tag — the attribute is genuine for them. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two bugs in the start/stop helpers were silently hanging the bench
after load:
1. stop_gizmosql did `kill $pid; wait $pid 2>/dev/null`, but `wait` on
a non-child returns immediately (errno suppressed). The function
returned before gizmosql_server was actually gone. The DuckDB fcntl
lock on clickbench.db hadn't been released yet, so the next
start_gizmosql kicked off a new server that crashed in ~2 s with
terminate called after throwing duckdb::IOException
Could not set lock on file "clickbench.db":
Conflicting lock is held in . (PID <old-pid>)
visible in gizmosql_server.log.
2. start_gizmosql then sat in `while ! nc -z ...; sleep 1; done` for
the dead server's port that would never open — pstree shows ./start
stuck on the sleep. With ./start invoked as `./start >/dev/null 2>&1`
from bench_run_query, the user sees nothing on stdout/stderr after
"Load time: ..." and assumes the bench is hung.
Fix both:
* stop_gizmosql polls `kill -0 $pid` until the process is actually
gone (up to 60 s), then SIGKILLs if still alive.
* start_gizmosql retries up to 5 times. Each attempt has a 60 s
bounded wait, and is abandoned early if the child PID dies (the
lock-conflict case). A 2 s sleep between attempts gives the kernel
time to release the prior lock.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
…t-parquet{,-partitioned},sirius}/load: surface OOM/crash mid-ingest
Every dataframe/server load script was the same one-liner:
elapsed=$(curl -sS -X POST http://127.0.0.1:8000/load \
| python3 -c 'import json,sys; print(json.load(sys.stdin)["elapsed"])')
With `set -e` and a `$(...)` capture, neither curl errors nor JSON
parse errors land in the log. When the server gets OOM-killed mid-
ingest (e.g. duckdb-memory on c6a.4xlarge — 13 GB of .tmp spill,
ingest reaches ~99 %, earlyoom takes the process), curl exits with
"connection reset", the pipe collapses silently, the script exits
non-zero with no message, cloud-init prints "Disk usage after",
sink.parser rejects the row for having no timings, and we get a 266 s
"successful-looking" run with zero results on the dashboard.
Capture the response body, branch on curl vs JSON failures, and
print the actual server output (often the OOM traceback or an
HTTPException detail) to stderr before bailing. Same pattern across
all 7 sibling load scripts; the sirius variant gets a tailored
"server may have crashed during GPU-buffer init" message since its
real ingest happens in the duckdb CLI step before the curl.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
…sults Upstream landed new result files without the "stateless" tag (and the "lukewarm-cold-run" cleanup pass stripped it from a few). Re-add the tag uniformly across polars, sail*, spark*, *-parquet, *-datalake. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The previous commit's `git add */template.json` glob picked up two untracked archive directories. Drop them from the index; the files remain in the working tree as before. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
… cold tries
Semantic shift: the old flag conflated "does this system have a daemon
to restart" with "does the data survive a restart". The new BENCH_DURABLE
asks the second question directly, and the driver acts on it:
BENCH_DURABLE=yes (default) — data is on disk (daemons like clickhouse,
or CLI tools like duckdb operating on a
.db file). Cold cycle is the existing
stop -> wait_stopped -> drop_caches ->
start -> check. Each ./query then runs
3 times: first cold, two warm.
BENCH_DURABLE=no — data lives in process memory (in-process
servers: pandas, polars, duckdb-dataframe,
duckdb-memory, chdb-dataframe, daft-*,
sirius). The restart wipes it, so after
the start+check we re-run ./load and
roll its wall-clock into the first
("cold") try. The recorded cold timing
is now load+query, which is the honest
cost of "fresh-start engine + first
query" instead of "warm query against a
freshly-loaded RAM dataset".
Migrations:
* All 108 benchmark.sh shims renamed BENCH_RESTARTABLE -> BENCH_DURABLE.
* 9 in-process server shims set DURABLE=no (chdb-dataframe, daft-parquet,
daft-parquet-partitioned, duckdb-dataframe, duckdb-memory, pandas,
polars, polars-dataframe, sirius).
* Previously RESTARTABLE=no CLI systems (duckdb, sqlite, datafusion,
hyper, octosql, opteryx, etc.) become DURABLE=yes — they're stateless
per-process so the cold cycle is essentially drop_caches + a no-op
stop/start.
* 6 in-process load scripts (chdb-dataframe, duckdb-dataframe,
duckdb-memory, pandas, polars-dataframe, sirius) used to rm
hits.parquet right after the first load — drop that, since
bench_run_query now needs the source file to reload after each
restart. Moved the cleanup into bench_main (DURABLE=no branch only).
* Back-compat: BENCH_RESTARTABLE is still read as an alias if BENCH_DURABLE
isn't set, so stale env/scripts keep working for one cycle.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Add the "stateless" tag to glaredb and glaredb-partitioned results and templates so they are excluded from the Load Time view alongside the other Parquet/data-lake systems. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Conflicts: * gizmosql/util.sh — main added '--storage-version latest' to the gizmosql_server invocation; refactor branch rewrote the start/stop helpers with bounded waits, retry-on-DuckDB-lock-conflict, and a polling-based stop. Kept both: the rewritten helpers keep their shape, with the storage-version flag folded into the new start_gizmosql's nohup call. * data.generated.js — both sides regenerated; resolved by taking this branch's version and re-running generate-results.sh so the data.generated.js reflects the union of all post-merge result files in tree.
… timed window Ingest writers (postgres COPY, ClickHouse INSERT, DuckDB CTAS, etc.) return well before their pages reach disk. Individual per-system load scripts were inconsistent about calling `sync` themselves — some did, some didn't, and a few of the recent dataframe scripts dropped it when we refactored away their `rm -f hits.parquet` step. Without a final sync the first cold query then pays the writeback as if it were query work, which is unfair to the systems whose load script DID flush. Add `sync` to bench_load between `./load` and the end-of-load timestamp. Now load_time is the honest "data is on disk" wall-clock for every system, and the cold timer doesn't catch leftover writeback. Per-system `sync` calls at the end of individual load scripts become redundant but stay in place for clarity (they're inside the same timed window, so the cost is unchanged). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Mirror the "ClickHouse derivative" convention: every system whose
engine is DuckDB (vanilla or wrapped) gets a "DuckDB derivative"
tag in template.json and every historical result.
Tagged 17 systems × all their results:
duckdb, duckdb-{dataframe, memory, datalake, datalake-partitioned,
parquet, parquet-partitioned, vortex, vortex-partitioned}
motherduck (managed DuckDB cloud)
pg_duckdb, pg_duckdb-{indexed, parquet, motherduck}, pg_ducklake
(Postgres extension running DuckDB inside;
ducklake is built on the same extension)
gizmosql (Arrow Flight SQL frontend over DuckDB)
sirius (GPU-accelerated DuckDB extension via
call gpu_processing("..."))
Insertion is right after "column-oriented" (or, failing that, the
language tag) — matches where "ClickHouse derivative" lives.
Multi-line tags arrays get the new tag as its own indented line;
single-line arrays keep their compact shape with the tag inserted
inline.
302 files updated.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Both run DuckDB as the underlying OLAP execution engine even though they expose a Postgres surface: * pg_mooncake — Postgres extension by Mooncake Labs that pushes columnar query execution through DuckDB. * crunchy-bridge-for-analytics — Crunchy Bridge's analytics tier built on the crunchy_query_engine Postgres extension, which is a forked DuckDB. Audited the rest of the recent batch: arc is a Go time-series engine (Basekick-Labs, no DuckDB), sail / sail-partitioned are the Rust Spark-Connect server (DataFusion under the hood, not DuckDB). Those stay as-is. Tag inserted right after "column-oriented" in the same surgical shape as the previous DuckDB-derivative sweep. 16 files total (2 templates + 14 result JSONs). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Hovering a row in the summary table now reveals a × to the left of the table; clicking it deselects that system from the System filter and re-renders. The hit box overlaps the cell so the hover doesn't drop while moving the cursor toward the symbol. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Render the entry's YYYY-MM-DD date at the right end of the bar cell in the summary table, in a small monospace font with a 2px text-stroke outline in the background color so it stays legible over bar colors and row stripes. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
- generate-results.sh: when a JSON omits the .date field, inject the YYYY-MM-DD value derived from the YYYYMMDD directory segment. - Backfill the .date field in 40 sail / sail-partitioned / timescale-cloud / timescaledb-no-columnstore result files that were missing it, so the source-of-truth JSON also carries the date. - Regenerate data.generated.js. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
bench_main now runs an extra step after the cold/warm sweep: N workers (default 10) fire queries against the running system for D seconds (default 600). Each connection picks queries from a deterministic per-connection permutation seeded from BENCH_CONCURRENT_SEED + connection_id (SHA-256 → integer to keep it stable across Python versions), so connection 3 hits the same query order on every engine — cross-system QPS becomes a comparison of identical workloads rather than each system rolling its own shuffle. Before the window starts, do one more stop / wait_stopped / drop_caches / start / check (and ./load for BENCH_DURABLE=no), so the test doesn't inherit whatever caches the last bench_run_query left. A side watchdog polls ./check every 5 s. When the engine dies during the window the watchdog revives it (./stop + ./start + check loop + ./load for non-durable) WITHOUT halting the workers — they keep firing queries; errors during the dead window count toward "Concurrent error ratio" and successes after the revive count toward "Concurrent QPS". The QPS therefore stays a real number across mid-test crashes; "null" only when the engine never recovered enough to serve a single query. Two new log lines: Concurrent QPS: <N.NNN | null> Concurrent error ratio: <0.NNN | null> prepare-database.sql: * sink.results gains concurrent_qps and concurrent_error_ratio (Nullable(Float64)). * sink.parser extracts both via toFloat64OrNull so the literal "null" string lands as a SQL NULL. * output JSON template carries the new fields so the per-system result.json gets them too. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Summary
benchmark.shinto 7 single-purpose scripts (install,start,check,stop,load,query,data-size) with a stable contract, driven by a new sharedlib/benchmark-common.sh.Why
Previously, every system's
benchmark.shbundled installation, server lifecycle, dataset download, data loading, and query dispatch into one script — andrun.shhard-coded the per-query orchestration. There was no programmatic per-query entry point, so:run.shran all 3 tries inside a single CLI invocation, so OS-cache warmth from try 1 leaked into tries 2/3.The new per-system interface
installstartcheckSELECT 1). Exit 0 iff responsive.stoploadsync.query0.123)data-sizeEach system's
benchmark.shbecomes a 4-line shim that sets a couple of env vars andexec's the shared driver:The shared driver runs
install → start+check → download → load (timed) → for each query: flush caches; if BENCH_RESTARTABLE=yes, stop+start; run query 3× → data-size → stop. The output log shape (Load time:,[t1,t2,t3],per query,Data size:) is identical to the oldbenchmark.sh, socloud-init.sh.in's POST to play.clickhouse.com keeps working unchanged.BENCH_RESTARTABLE=nofor embedded CLIs (duckdb, sqlite, datafusion, …) and dataframe wrappers — restarting a single CLI/Python process between queries would dominate query time. For these, OS caches are still flushed between queries.Scope
Refactored (88 systems):
Not refactored (intentionally out of scope):
Validated end-to-end on a 96-core / 185 GB ARM machine
null(framework's error path works)All 88 refactored systems pass
bash -nand have executable bits set on the 7 scripts + benchmark.sh.Bug fixes surfaced during validation
lib/benchmark-common.sh:data-sizenow runs beforestop(clickhouse and pandas need the server up to report size).clickhouse/start: idempotent (was erroring when already running).duckdb/load,sqlite/load:rm -f hits.db/mydbfor idempotent reruns.postgresql/load:-v ON_ERROR_STOP=1so COPY data errors actually fail the script instead of silently rolling back.BENCH_DOWNLOAD_SCRIPTmay now be empty for systems that read directly from S3 datalakes / remote services (clickhouse-datalake*, duckdb-datalake*, chyt, …).Flagged for follow-up review
duckdb-memory—:memory:semantics force a per-query reload; will inflate timings vs. the original single-process flow.cloudberry,greenplum— multi-phase install (reboot between phases); the shim only runs phase 1.sirius— GPU-dependent; long-livedduckdbCLI subprocess proxy; review the stdin/sentinel protocol.paradedb*,pg_ducklake,pg_mooncake— Docker container created ininstallthendocker cpinload(small divergence from the originaldocker run -v ...due to the lifecycle order:startruns beforedownload).Test plan
bash -non all 88 systems' scripts🤖 Generated with Claude Code