I just received a new server and thought benchmarks would be interesting.  I think this 
looks pretty good, but maybe there are some suggestions about the configuration file.  
This is a web app, a mix of read/write, where writes tend to be "insert into ... 
(select ...)" where the resulting insert is on the order of 100 to 10K rows of two 
integers.  An external process also uses a LOT of CPU power along with each query.

Thanks,
Craig


Configuration:
 Dell 2950
 8 CPU (Intel 2GHz Xeon)
 8 GB memory
 Dell Perc 6i with battery-backed cache
 RAID 10 of 8x 146GB SAS 10K 2.5" disks

Everything (OS, WAL and databases) are on the one RAID array.

Diffs from original configuration:

max_connections = 1000
shared_buffers = 400MB
work_mem = 256MB
max_fsm_pages = 1000000
max_fsm_relations = 5000
wal_buffers = 256kB
effective_cache_size = 4GB

Bonnie output (slightly reformatted)

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Delete files in random order...done.
Version  1.03
        ------Sequential Output------       --Sequential Input-      --Random-
     -Per Chr-   --Block--    -Rewrite-     -Per Chr-   --Block--    --Seeks--
Size K/sec %CP   K/sec  %CP   K/sec  %CP    K/sec %CP   K/sec  %CP    /sec %CP
 16G 64205  99   234252  38   112924  26    65275  98   293852  24   940.3   1

        ------Sequential Create------    --------Random Create--------
     -Create--   --Read---   -Delete--   -Create--   --Read---   -Delete--
files  /sec %CP    /sec %CP    /sec %CP    /sec %CP    /sec %CP    /sec %CP
  16 12203  95   +++++ +++   19469  94   12297  95   +++++ +++   15578  82

www.xxx.com,16G,64205,99,234252,38,112924,26,65275,98,293852,24,940.3,1,16,12203,95,+++++,+++,19469,94,12297,95,+++++,+++,15578,82

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

$ pgbench -c 10 -t 10000 -v test -U test
starting vacuum...end.
starting vacuum accounts...end.
transaction type: TPC-B (sort of)
scaling factor: 1
number of clients: 10
number of transactions per client: 10000
number of transactions actually processed: 100000/100000
tps = 2786.377933 (including connections establishing)
tps = 2787.888209 (excluding connections establishing)



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