On 14 July 2010 17:24, Werner Smit wrote:
> I'd however like to test this with a local server - is there a faq
> somewhere about compressed ssh tunneling on oracle ports? Is it open
> source? Have you done it yourself? What was speed improvement?
As mentioned by other posters, compressing on th
On 14 July 2010 17:00, Werner Smit wrote:
> It DOES sound terrible since 90%? of the time is spend in retrieving
> data from a remote oracle server over a slow line.
I think you're trying to optimise the wrong thing :)
Assuming you can't upgrade that slow line, how about running a
compressed ss
On 14 July 2010 17:00, Werner Smit wrote:
> It DOES sound terrible since 90%? of the time is spend in retrieving
> data from a remote oracle server over a slow line.
I think you're trying to optimise the wrong thing :)
Assuming you can't upgrade that slow line, how about running a
compressed ss
>According to my math your final database size should be on the order of
100Meg?
>
>That means at 200 minutes and 1,000,000 records:
>83 inserts per second
>8333 bytes per second
>Both of these values are terrible.
>#1 What kind of network connection do you have? 100BaseT?
>#2 What kind of
According to my math your final database size should be on the order of 100Meg?
That means at 200 minutes and 1,000,000 records:
83 inserts per second
8333 bytes per second
Both of these values are terrible.
#1 What kind of network connection do you have? 100BaseT?
#2 What kind of server a
You've got the source code. Modify sqlite3journalopen to put your journal in
%TEMP% or or maybe getcwd().
I couldn't quite figure out where the journal filename is set -- there's no
db-journal in the code so the name setting appears magjic to me. Since you've
got complete control over the sour
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