Mark Rae wrote:
I would say that doing the concurrency tests is probably the most
important factor in comparing other databases against MySQL, as
MySQL will almost always win in single-user tests.

E.g. here are some performance figures from tests I have done in the past.
This is with a 6GB databse on a 4CPU Itanium system running a mixture of
read-only queries, but it is fairly typical of the behaviour I have seen. The Oracle figures also scaled in a similar way to postgres.


Clients           1     2     3     4     6     8    12    16    32    64   128
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
mysql-4.1.1    1.00  1.41  1.34  1.16  0.93  1.03  1.01  1.00  0.94  0.86  0.80
pg-7.4.1       0.65  1.27  1.90  2.48  2.45  2.50  2.48  2.51  2.49  2.39  2.38

Would be interesting to know about the tuning of the MySQL, I guess that buffers for indexing and sort is well setup, but what about thread caching? Knowing that will once in a while you will have a connection burst you can tell mysql to cache thread so that it can save time next time it needs them.



-- Robin Ericsson http://robin.vill.ha.kuddkrig.nu/

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