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On 05/11/07 21:35, Dhaval Shah wrote:
> I do care about the following:
> 
> 1. Basic type checking
> 2. Knowing failed inserts.
> 3. Non-corruption
> 4. Macro transactions. That is a minimal read consistency.
> 
> The following is not necessary
> 
> 1. Referential integrity
> 
> In this particular scenario,
> 
> 1. There is a sustained load and peak loads. As long as we can handle
> peak loads, the sustained loads can be half of the quoted figure.
> 2.  The row size has limited columns. That is, it is spans at most a
> dozen or so columns and most integer or varchar.
> 
> It is more data i/o heavy rather than cpu heavy.

Have you tested PG (and MySQL, for that matter) to determine what
kind of load they can handle on existing h/w?

Back to the original post: 100K inserts/second is 360 *million*
inserts per hour.  That's a *lot*.  Even if the steady-state is 50K
inserts/sec that's 180M inserts/hr.  If each record is 120 bytes,
that's 43 gigabytes per hour.  Which is 12MB/second.  No problem
from a h/w standpoint.

However, it will fill a 300GB HDD in 7 hours.

- --
Ron Johnson, Jr.
Jefferson LA  USA

Give a man a fish, and he eats for a day.
Hit him with a fish, and he goes away for good!

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