Greg Copeland wrote:
> On Thu, 2002-03-14 at 14:03, Arguile wrote:
>
> [snip]
>
> > I'm sceptical of the benefit such compressions would provide in this setting
> > though. We're dealing with sets that would have to be compressed every time
> > (no caching) which might be a bit expensive on a database server. Having it
> > as a default off option for psql migtht be nice, but I wonder if it's worth
> > the time, effort, and cpu cycles.
> >
>
> I dunno.  That's a good question.  For now, I'm making what tends to be
> a safe assumption (opps...that word), that most database servers will be
> I/O bound rather than CPU bound.  *IF* that assumption hold true, it

    If  you  have  too  much  CPU  idle  time you wasted money by
    oversizing the machine. And as soon as you  add  SORT  BY  to
    your queries, you'll see some CPU used.

    I  only make the assumption that whenever there is a database
    server, there is an application server as well  (or  multiple
    of them). Scenarios that require direct end-user connectivity
    to the database server (alas  Access->MSSQL)  should  NOT  be
    encouraged.

    The  db and app should be very close together, coupled with a
    dedicated backbone net. No need for encryption, and if volume
    is a problem, gigabit is the answer.


Jan

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