Re: PostgreSQL clustering VS MySQL clustering - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From Marty Scholes
Subject Re: PostgreSQL clustering VS MySQL clustering
Date
Msg-id 41FE4DC7.7060903@outputservices.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: PostgreSQL clustering VS MySQL clustering  (Marty Scholes <marty@outputservices.com>)
List pgsql-performance
 > Tell me if I am wrong but it sounds to me like like
 > an endless problem....

Agreed.  Such it is with caching.  After doing some informal
benchmarking with 8.0 under Solaris, I am convinced that our major choke
point is WAL synchronization, at least for applications with a high
commit rate.

We have noticed a substantial improvement in performance with 8.0 vs
7.4.6.  All of the update/insert problems seem to have gone away, save
WAL syncing.

I may have to take back what I said about indexes.


Olivier Sirven wrote:
> Le Vendredi 21 Janvier 2005 19:18, Marty Scholes a écrit :
>
>>The indexes can be put on a RAM disk tablespace and that's the end of
>>index problems -- just make sure you have enough memory available.  Also
>>make sure that the machine can restart correctly after a crash: the
>>tablespace is dropped and recreated, along with the indexes.  This will
>>cause a machine restart to take some time.
>
> Tell me if I am wrong but it sounds to me like like an endless problem....This
> solution may work with small indexes (less than 4GB) but what appends when
> the indexes grow ? You would add more memory to your server ? But there will
> be a moment were you can not add more so what's next ?




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