English

High-Performance DBMSs with io_uring: When and How to use it

Databases 2025-12-15 v2

Abstract

We study how modern database systems can leverage the Linux io_uring interface for efficient, low-overhead I/O. io_uring is an asynchronous system call batching interface that unifies storage and network operations, addressing limitations of existing Linux I/O interfaces. However, naively replacing traditional I/O interfaces with io_uring does not necessarily yield performance benefits. To demonstrate when io_uring delivers the greatest benefits and how to use it effectively in modern database systems, we evaluate it in two use cases: Integrating io_uring into a storage-bound buffer manager and using it for high-throughput data shuffling in network-bound analytical workloads. We further analyze how advanced io_uring features, such as registered buffers and passthrough I/O, affect end-to-end performance. Our study shows when low-level optimizations translate into tangible system-wide gains and how architectural choices influence these benefits. Building on these insights, we derive practical guidelines for designing I/O-intensive systems using io_uring and validate their effectiveness in a case study of PostgreSQL's recent io_uring integration, where applying our guidelines yields a performance improvement of 14%.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2512.04859,
  title  = {High-Performance DBMSs with io_uring: When and How to use it},
  author = {Matthias Jasny and Muhammad El-Hindi and Tobias Ziegler and Viktor Leis and Carsten Binnig},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2512.04859},
  year   = {2025}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T08:09:37.939Z