No.  :-)

It is really going to depend on whether the data has changed from the snapshot and how many ECs are in existence. If the data has changed, a message will be broadcast for each object and processed by the unlocked ECs and stored for later processing by the locked ECs. Refreshing lots of objects with changed data that are in lots of ECs will have the most impact.

Chuck

On Nov 2, 2006, at 10:08 AM, Mike Schrag wrote:

Has anyone done the performance comparison between executing a regular EOFetchSpec versus turning on refreshing on refetched objects on the same fetch spec?

ms
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