> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Bill Moran
> Sent: Friday, October 10, 2003 12:42 PM
> To: Hervé Piedvache
> Cc: Postgresql Performance
> Subject: Re: [PERFORM] One or more processor ?
>
>
> Hervé Piedvache wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > A simp
I concur 100%. PostgreSQL was big and scary and MySQL seemed cute and
cuddly, warm and fuzzy. Then I took my undergrad CS RDBMS course (a course
that focused on designing the backend software), and only then was I ready
to appreciate and wield the battle axe that is PostgreSQL.
He also let me use
here to ask more about the performance of pg-w32. Did it take a
hit? Is it faster (than Cygwin, than Unix)? Stability? I saw there were some
mailings about file-moving race conditions, links and such.
Thanks.
Jason Hihn
Paytime Payroll
---(end of broadcast
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Greg
> Spiegelberg
> Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2003 3:11 PM
> To: PgSQL Performance ML
> Subject: Re: [PERFORM] Compare rows
>
>
> Josh Berkus wrote:
> > Greg,
> >
> >
> >>The data represents metri
Comment interjected below.
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Greg
> Spiegelberg
> Sent: Wednesday, October 08, 2003 12:28 PM
> To: PgSQL Performance ML
> Subject: Re: [PERFORM] Compare rows
>
>
> Josh Berkus wrote:
> > Greg,
> >
> >
> >>An
Stepping out on a limb... (I'm not a disk kernel guy)
I have long thought that as part of a cache descriptor, there should be a
process-definable replacement-strategy (RS). Each cache entry would be
associated to each process's replacement-strategy variable and the
page-replacement algorithm would
nds on when we deploy and 2.6's track record at that
time)
I want something that can do hot-swaps and auto-mirroring after swap.
Unfortunately, this is a new area for me. (I normally stick to S/W for
non-high end systems)
Thanks!
Jason Hihn
Paytime Payroll
--