So after you did that, where able to position to ANY record within the
resultset?

Ex. Position 100,000; then  to Position 5; then to position 50,000, etc...

If you are able to do that and have your positioned row available to you
immediately, then I'll believe that it's the ODBC driver.

"Hannu Krosing" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Relaxin kirjutas N, 04.09.2003 kell 03:28:
> > I have a table with 102,384 records in it, each record is 934 bytes.
>
> I created a test database on my Linux (RH9) laptop with 30GB/4200RPM ide
> drive and P3-1133Mhz, 768MB, populated it with 128000 rows of 930 bytes
> each and did
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] hannu]$ time psql test100k -c 'select * from test' >
> /dev/null
>
> real    0m3.970s
> user    0m0.980s
> sys     0m0.570s
>
> so it seems definitely not a problem with postgres as such, but perhaps
> with Cygwin and/or ODBC driver
>
> I also ran the same query  using the "standard" pg adapter:
>
> >>> import pg, time
> >>>
> >>> con = pg.connect('test100k')
> >>>
> >>> def getall():
> ...     t1 = time.time()
> ...     res = con.query('select * from test')
> ...     t2 = time.time()
> ...     list = res.getresult()
> ...     t3 = time.time()
> ...     print t2 - t1, t3-t2
> ...
> >>> getall()
> 3.27637195587 1.10105705261
> >>> getall()
> 3.07413101196 0.996125936508
> >>> getall()
> 3.03377199173 1.07322502136
>
> which gave similar results
>
> ------------------------------
> Hannu
>
>
>
>
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