From: Claudio Freire   Sent: Friday, September 02, 2016 1:27 PM
On Thu, Sep 1, 2016 at 11:30 PM, Mike Sofen < <mailto:mso...@runbox.com> 
mso...@runbox.com> wrote:

> It's obvious the size of the batch exceeded the AWS server memory, 

> resulting in a profoundly slower processing time.  This was a true, 

> apples to apples comparison between Pass 1 and Pass 2: average row 

> lengths were within 7% of each other (1121 vs 1203) using identical 

> table structures and processing code, the only difference was the target 
> server.

> 

> I'm happy to answer questions about these results.

 

Are you sure it's a memory thing and not an EBS bandwidth thing?

 

EBS has significantly less bandwidth than direct-attached flash.

 

You raise a good point.  However, other disk activities involving large data 
(like backup/restore and pure large table copying), on both platforms, do not 
seem to support that notion.  I did have both our IT department and Cisco turn 
on instrumentation for my last test, capturing all aspects of both tests on 
both platforms, and I’m hoping to see the results early next week and will 
reply again.

 

Mike

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