, not an engine perspective. Perhaps some network traffic could
be pruned, not sending the response.
Jordan Henderson
On Tuesday 27 February 2007, Joshua D. Drake wrote:
> Josh Berkus wrote:
> > Simon,
> >
> > One of the things I love about doing informal onlin
ll of
the difference. We need to remember who the audience
is. We cannot gain mass market share otherwise.
My 2 cents, won't buy coffee,
Jordan Henderson
--- Bruno Wolff III <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 23, 2004 at 16:36:57 -0400,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> &
Jan,
I am wondering if you are familar with the work covered in 'Recovery in
Parallel Database Systems' by Svein-Olaf Hvasshovd (Vieweg) ? The book is an
excellent detailed description covering high availablility DB
implementations.
I think your right on by not thinking smaller
forced into
using a product in a specific manner. Instead, I would let them decide
whether to choose a simple setup or, if they are up to it, something with
better performance. I would not prune the options out. In doing so, we
limit what a knowledgeable person can do a priori.
Jordan Henderson
ative overhead.
Jordan Henderson
On Thursday 30 October 2003 12:55, Sailesh Krishnamurthy wrote:
> DB2 supports cooked and raw file systems - SMS (System Manged Space)
> and DMS (Database Managed Space) tablespaces.
>
> The DB2 experience is that DMS tends to outperform SMS but requir
dard transaction
> implementation) aborts all transactions on crash.
Jordan Henderson
---(end of broadcast)---
TIP 8: explain analyze is your friend
Dave, Justin,
I have several Informix clients who will be moving to a Postgresql/Aubit4gl
solution at some point. The Informix line is, for them, a dead end. One
way or another the backend will become Postgresql. Because of the number of
SQL statements, I would encourage support where possible