Re: RE : RE: [PERFORM] Postgresql vs SQLserver for this application ?
I think everyone was scared off by the 5000 inserts per second number. I've never seen even Oracle do this on a top end Dell system with copious SCSI attached storage. Alex Turner netEconomist On Apr 6, 2005 3:17 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Unfortunately. But we are in the the process to choose Postgresql with pgcluster. I'm currently running some tests (performance, stability...) Save the money on the license fees, you get it for your hardware ;-) I still welcome any advices or comments and I'll let you know how the project is going on. Benjamin. Mohan, Ross [EMAIL PROTECTED] 05/04/2005 20:48 Pour :[EMAIL PROTECTED] cc : Objet :RE: [PERFORM] Postgresql vs SQLserver for this application ? You never got answers on this? Apologies, I don't have one, but'd be curious to hear about any you did get thx Ross -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, April 04, 2005 4:02 AM To: pgsql-performance@postgresql.org Subject: [PERFORM] Postgresql vs SQLserver for this application ? hi all. We are designing a quite big application that requires a high-performance database backend. The rates we need to obtain are at least 5000 inserts per second and 15 selects per second for one connection. There should only be 3 or 4 simultaneous connections. I think our main concern is to deal with the constant flow of data coming from the inserts that must be available for selection as fast as possible. (kind of real time access ...) As a consequence, the database should rapidly increase up to more than one hundred gigs. We still have to determine how and when we shoud backup old data to prevent the application from a performance drop. We intend to develop some kind of real-time partionning on our main table keep the flows up. At first, we were planning to use SQL Server as it has features that in my opinion could help us a lot : - replication - clustering Recently we started to study Postgresql as a solution for our project : - it also has replication - Postgis module can handle geographic datatypes (which would facilitate our developments) - We do have a strong knowledge on Postgresql administration (we use it for production processes) - it is free (!) and we could save money for hardware purchase. Is SQL server clustering a real asset ? How reliable are Postgresql replication tools ? Should I trust Postgresql performance for this kind of needs ? My question is a bit fuzzy but any advices are most welcome... hardware,tuning or design tips as well :)) Thanks a lot. Benjamin. ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not match
Re: RE : RE: [PERFORM] Postgresql vs SQLserver for this application
Mohan, Ross wrote: I wish I had a Dell system and run case to show you Alex, but I don't... however...using Oracle's direct path feature, it's pretty straightforward. We've done 110,000 rows per second into index-less tables on a big system (IBM Power5 chips, Hitachi SAN). ( Yes, I am sure: over 100K a second. Sustained for almost 9 minutes. ) Yes, this is an exception, but oracle directpath/InsertAppend/BulkLoad feature enabled us to migrate a 4 TB database...really quickly. How close to this is PG's COPY? I get surprisingly good results using COPY with jdbc on smallish systems (now if that patch would make into the mainstream PG jdbc support!) I think COPY has a bit more overhead than what a Bulkload feature may have, but I suspect it's not that much more. Now...if you ask me can this work without Power5 and Hitachi SAN? my answer is..you give me a top end Dell and SCSI III on 15K disks and I'll likely easily match it, yea. I'd love to see PG get into this range..i am a big fan of PG (just a rank newbie) but I gotta think the underlying code to do this has to be not-too-complex. It may not be that far off if you can use COPY instead of INSERT. But comparing Bulkload to INSERT is a bit apples-orangish. -- Steve Wampler -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] The gods that smiled on your birth are now laughing out loud. ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://archives.postgresql.org
Re: RE : RE: [PERFORM] Postgresql vs SQLserver for this application ?
How close to this is PG's COPY? I get surprisingly good results using COPY with jdbc on smallish systems (now if that patch would make into the mainstream PG jdbc support!) I think COPY has a bit more overhead than what a Bulkload feature may have, but I suspect it's not that much more. || Steve, I do not know. But am reading the docs now, and should figure it out. Ask me later if you remember. Oracle's direct path is a way of just slamming blocks filled with rows into the table, above the high water mark. It sidesteps freelist management and all manner of intrablock issues. There is a payback, but the benefits far far outweigh the costs. Now...if you ask me can this work without Power5 and Hitachi SAN? my answer is..you give me a top end Dell and SCSI III on 15K disks and I'll likely easily match it, yea. I'd love to see PG get into this range..i am a big fan of PG (just a rank newbie) but I gotta think the underlying code to do this has to be not-too-complex. It may not be that far off if you can use COPY instead of INSERT. But comparing Bulkload to INSERT is a bit apples-orangish. || Oh! I see! I had no idea I was doing that! Thanks for pointing it out clearly to me. Yea, I would say a full transactional INSERT of 5K rows/sec into an indexed-table is a near-mythology without significant caveats (parallelized, deferred buffering, etc.) -- Steve Wampler -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] The gods that smiled on your birth are now laughing out loud. ---(end of broadcast)--- TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command (send unregister YourEmailAddressHere to [EMAIL PROTECTED])