You might want to check those results again. Oracle has the top three in the TP-C, 
nonclustered results. With the clustered results Oracle has the highest for 1 
CPU/client. Everything above them has 2 CPU/client. The configuration is important. MS 
SQL Server's configuration for
their highest rating was absurd (192 CPU's). 
 
- Paul
 
 -----Original Message-----
Sent: Monday, February 05, 2001 8:56 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L



"NT still pants"...LOL!!! 
 
It must be panting alot, It has BLOWN THE DOORS OFF of "Oracle on Unix" in running 
SQLServer on NT, as has DB2. 
 
The general public ( and anyone else ) can wake up and smell the coffee at www.tpc.org 
<http://www.tpc.org> .  
Check out the Top Ten TPC-C marks, by pure performance. 
 
Not interested in pure peformance?  Check out the Price/Performance leaders. Oracle 
doesn't
even SHOW UP in the top ten. What a shocker, eh? It's painful to lose our illusions....
 
Oh, what's that? You don't like TPC-C? It's outmoded or somesuch? Fine, check out ANY
of the TPC benchmarks. Oracle is NEVER in the top three. Usually, it doesn't even show
up. 
 
I mean, I like Oracle, too, but....by the time you turn on the multimode 
airconditioner, use 
the 12-way adjustable power bucket seats, activate the object-oriented OnStar 
Satellite 
navigational system, power up the heated side view mirrors and all the other tools, 
trinkets, 
and toys that make it my personal favorite database, there *is* the chance that the 
twenty year old genius mechanic in the the tricked out Nova next to you at the light 
is going 
to kick your ass when the light turns green.
 
But really, I still love Oracle. Warts and all. 
 
Wanna drag?
 
(heh heh heh)
 
 
 
 

-----Original Message-----
Sent: Saturday, February 03, 2001 6:45 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L


I have actually been doing a fair it of reading on this since the topic was brought 
up, and stand corrected, as earlier mentioned. But I have to say guys that NT is still 
fairly "pants" when it comes to handling multi threaded processes.. Win2K is a great 
improvement but M$ still
has a lot of work to do on in my view. (only when you compare this against UNIX) 
 
Now don't get me wrong, there is enough traffic on this list about this at the moment, 
so I dont want more bandwith added with this thread if at all possible :)
 
Thanks for the reply anyway Yong, I think I will wait for a "good" book on Win2k to 
come out (unless you know one?) before I go out and buy one (books come out of my 
pocket as I am a sales person mostly).. NT as far as I am concerned is now in Win2K's 
shadow, and I think that is
the way of the future for Windowze bound people.
 
For all out there that have used NT and not Win2K - TRY IT.. Services are handled a 
LOT better, file management and sharing.. All sorts of new fun stuff to sink your 
teeth in to.. 
 
As a side note, for the last line of my first paragraph - I also feel that UNIX cannot 
be compared in anyway to Windows at this time. Windowze O/S's are designed for pointy 
clicky people that prefer to look at a nice GUI interface, and generally don't have 
the indepth technical
knowledge that a good UNIX sys admin does.. 
 
(If there any NT admins out there don't flame me, I have to deal with it every day of 
my life...)
 
Regards
 
Mark
 
The views expressed here are soley those coming out of my coffee deprived hungover 
mind.. They do not express those of my employers, though I'm sure they agree :^)

-----Original Message-----
Sent: Friday, February 02, 2001 07:00
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L



Oracle on NT runs as 

ONE PROCESS 

with 

MULTIPLE THREADS 


for performance reasons (no more 
need for shared memory....context switches 
are a LOT less expensive, etc.) 


-----Original Message----- 
Sent: Friday, February 02, 2001 12:51 PM 
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L 


Hi, Mark, 

Async I/O is available on Windows, at least NT. It's not an easy topic. If you 
think you already know enough about operating systems in general, I suggest you 
read David Solomon's "Inside WindowsNT". For a lab test, launch Performance 
Monitor on your NT box and look at the counters for Cache. 

I'm not sure by "single thread management" whether you mean NT can't have 
multiple processes or Oracle on NT runs as one thread. The former is obviously 
wrong. The latter is a design issue inside Oracle Corporation and the question 
as to why was asked on this forum before without an answer (without an answer I 
can remember, that is). 

Yong Huang 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

you wrote: 

Asynch I/O on a Windowze box? supresses a snigger... 

To the best of my knowledge there are no Windows based system that can take 
advantage of this, single thread management can be enough a problem 
sometimes.. 

But, I may be wrong.. List? 

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