Hi,
Regarding Pentaho - please keep in mind that Pentaho needs significant 
amount of memory. We had a lot of issues with Pentaho crashing with java 
out of memory error. If you are using a 64 bit machine, you may be able to 
give it sufficient RAM and keep it happy. If all you have is one 4 GB 
machine to run PostgreSQL and the ETL tool, I have my doubts. It depends 
on the volume of data - how many GBs, rather than the number of records. 
Pentaho added PostgreSQL bulk loader as an experimental component 
recently. You can try that out. Talend can generate Java or perl 
components and was faster than Pentaho in our case. Since Talend community 
edition did not provide a shared development environment, we opted for 
Pentato.
 If there is not a lot of complex 'transformations', you should be able to 
manage fine with shell scripts.
Jayadevan




From:   Dino Vliet <[email protected]>
To:     [email protected]
Date:   01/25/2010 09:57 PM
Subject:        [GENERAL] general questions postgresql performance config
Sent by:        [email protected]




Dear postgresql people,
 
Introduction
Today I've been given the task to proceed with my plan to use postgresql 
and other open source techniques to demonstrate to the management of my 
department the usefullness and the "cost savings" potential that lies 
ahead. You can guess how excited I am right now. However, I should plan 
and execute at the highest level because I really want to show results. 
I'm employed in the financial services.
 
Context of the problem
Given 25 million input data, transform and load 10 million records to a 
single table DB2 database containing already 120 million records (the 
whole history).
 
The current process is done on the MVS mainframe while the SAS system is 
used to process the records (ETL like operations). The records of the two 
last months (so 20 million records) are also stored in a single SAS 
dataset, where users can access them through SAS running on their Windows 
PC's. With SAS PC's they can also analyse the historical records in the 
DB2 table on the mainframe.
 
These users are not tech savvy so this access method is not very 
productive for them but because the data is highly valued, they use it 
without complaining too much.
 
Currently it takes 5 to 6 hours before everything is finished.
 
Proof of concept
I want to showcase that a solution process like:
 
input-->Talend/Pentaho Kettle for ETL-->postgresql-->pentaho report 
designer, is feasible while staying in the 5~6 hours processing and 
loading time.
 
Input: flat files, position based
ETL: Pentaho Kettle or Talend to process these files
DBMS: postgresql 8 (on debian, opensuse, or freebsd)
Reporting: Pentaho report wizard
 
Hardware
AMD AM2 singlecore CPU with 4GB RAM
Two mirrored SATA II disks (raid-0)
 
Now that I have introduced my situation, I hope this list can give me some 
tips, advice, examples, pitfalls regarding the requirements I have.
 
Questions
1) Although this is not exactly rocket science, the sheer volume of the 
data makes it a hard task. Do you think my "solution" is 
viable/achievable?
 
2) What kind of OS would you choose for the setup I have proposed? I 
prefer FreeBSD with UFS2 as a filesystem, but I guess Debian with ext3 
filesystems or openSUSE with ext3 or Ubuntu server with ext3 would all be 
very good candidates too??
 
3) Would you opt for the ETL tools mentioned by me (pentaho and talend) or 
just rely on the unix/linux apps like gawk, sed, perl? I'm familiar with 
gawk. The ETL tools require java, so I would have to configure postgresql 
to not use all the available RAM otherwise risking the java out of memory 
error message. With that said, it would be best if I first configure my 
server to do the ETL processing and then afterwards configure it for 
database usage. 
 
4) what values would you advice for the various postgresql.conf values 
which can impact performance like shared buffers, temp_buffers, sort_mem, 
etc etc? Or is this more of like an "art" where I change and restart the 
db server, analyze the queries and iterate until I find optimal values?
 
5) Other considerations?
 
Thanks in advanced,
 
Dino
 






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