On Friday 31 October 2003 09:59 am, Marek Florianczyk wrote: > W liście z pią, 31-10-2003, godz. 15:23, Tom Lane pisze: > > Marek Florianczyk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > We are building hosting with apache + php ( our own mod_virtual module > > > ) with about 10.000 wirtul domains + PostgreSQL. > > > PostgreSQL is on a different machine ( 2 x intel xeon 2.4GHz 1GB RAM > > > scsi raid 1+0 ) > > > I've made some test's - 3000 databases and 400 clients connected at > > > same time. > > > > You are going to need much more serious iron than that if you want to > > support 10000 active databases. The required working set per database > > is a couple hundred K just for system catalogs (I don't have an exact > > figure in my head, but it's surely of that order of magnitude). > > it's about 3.6M > > > So the > > system catalogs alone would require 2 gig of RAM to keep 'em swapped in; > > never mind caching any user data. > > > > The recommended way to handle this is to use *one* database and create > > 10000 users each with his own schema. That should scale a lot better. > > > > Also, with a large max_connections setting, you have to beware that your > > kernel settings are adequate --- particularly the open-files table. > > It's pretty easy for Postgres to eat all your open files slots. PG > > itself will usually survive this condition just fine, but everything > > else you run on the machine will start falling over :-(. For safety > > you should make sure that max_connections * max_files_per_process is > > comfortably less than the size of the kernel's open-files table. > > Yes, I have made some updates, number of process, semaphores, and file > descriptor. I'm aware of this limitation. On this machine there will be > only PostgreSQL, nothing else. > This idea with one database and 10.000 schemas is very interesting, I > never thought about that. I will make some tests on monday and send > results to the list.
Following this logic, if you are willing to place the authentication in front of the database instead of inside it you can use a connection pool and simply change the search_path each time a new user accesses the database. > > greeings > Marek > > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 2: you can get off all lists at once with the unregister command > (send "unregister YourEmailAddressHere" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]) -- Mike Rylander ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: Have you checked our extensive FAQ? http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs/FAQ.html