> > thanks to all the responses. I will test with BTreeFolder2, and
> > subfoldering with first character of id as another subfolder2, so that
> > working with ZMI will also be possible without further scripting or
> > customized views. i will report the results back to the list.
>
> just an add
Even using BTreeFolder to store all objects I was getting >300s
delay to show a single object (ok, it's an archetypes-based one,
containing >50 fields, splitted into 7 schematas, with lots of
fancy stuff...). So I made a directory hash structure based on
UID from each object (an AT UID is md5, so w
Hi Nagarjuna,
Thanks a lot. Your report that performance enhances due to hashing is
encouraging the decision we took. In our case we already began using
BTreeFolder2, havent tried creating the large object base yet (will do
this week), but we doing something like what you did. we are creating
alp
On Mon, 2004-07-19 at 11:38, Dorneles TremÃa wrote:
> Resuming what I've learned: don't abuse of BTreeFolder, hash
> your content and live happy forever... ;-)
>
> PS: The server is a modest PIII 1.2GHz, 1GB RAM with a 160MB/s
> SCSI controller running only one instance of Zope 2.7.1 without
> ZE
Hello all,
thanks to all the responses. I will test with BTreeFolder2, and
subfoldering with first character of id as another subfolder2, so that
working with ZMI will also be possible without further scripting or
customized views. i will report the results back to the list.
just an additional in
On Wed, 2004-07-14 at 18:55, Casey Duncan wrote:
> On Wed, 14 Jul 2004 13:46:57 +0530
> "Nagarjuna G." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > We are builiding a large portal using Zope. We need to create a large
> > number of objects. The data component of the objects is small, but
> > each object car
On Wed, 14 Jul 2004 13:46:57 +0530
"Nagarjuna G." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> We are builiding a large portal using Zope. We need to create a large
> number of objects. The data component of the objects is small, but
> each object carries lots of metadata. My question is: Is there any
> limit