I reset the shared_buffers to 1000 from 128, but it made no difference. ""scott.marlowe"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > On Wed, 3 Sep 2003, Relaxin wrote: > > > I have a table with 102,384 records in it, each record is 934 bytes. > > > > Using the follow select statement: > > SELECT * from <table> > > > > PG Info: version 7.3.4 under cygwin on Windows 2000 > > ODBC: version 7.3.100 > > > > Machine: 500 Mhz/ 512MB RAM / IDE HDD > > > > > > Under PG: Data is returned in 26 secs!! > > Under SQL Server: Data is returned in 5 secs. > > Under SQLBase: Data is returned in 6 secs. > > Under SAPDB: Data is returned in 7 secs. > > This is typical of postgresql under cygwin, it's much faster under a Unix > OS like Linux or BSD. That said, you CAN do some things to help speed it > up, the biggest being tuning the shared_buffers to be something large > enough to hold a fair bit of data. Set the shared_buffers to 1000, > restart, and see if things get better. > > Running Postgresql in a unix emulation layer is guaranteed to make it > slow. If you've got a spare P100 with 128 Meg of RAM you can throw redhat > 9 or FreeBSD 4.7 on and run Postgresql on, it will likely outrun your > 500MHZ cygwin box, and might even keep up with the other databases on that > machine as well. > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? > > http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs/FAQ.html >
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