It means the enterprise lock manager copes better with higher contention. In 
other words, it performs better than the community lock manager.

--
Chris Vest
System Engineer, Neo Technology
[ skype: mr.chrisvest, twitter: chvest ]


On 17 Aug 2014, at 14:16, Alan Robertson <[email protected]> wrote:

>> the Enterprise Lock Manager keeps locks from stepping on each other on 
>> machines with > 5 cores. 
>> 
> 
> "Stepping on each other" generally means data corruption.  My test machine 
> has 8 cores.  So, I should expect database corruption?

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