I do not have any performance information at this time.
I do not think Google has published any.
Eventually we should run our own benchmarks.

On Oct 8, 3:19 pm, Kurt Fehlhauer <kfehl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Massimo,
>
> Thanks for your reply. This may not be the appropriate forum to ask
> this. As far as performance is concerned will Google Cloud SQL handle
> blobs as well as Big Table does running on Google's infrastructure? I
> suspect the answer will be that the differences are so negligible that
> it won't matter. On large applications I suspect it may be useful to
> use both Big Table and Google Cloud SQL at the same time. Have you
> given this any thought on when it is better to use Big Table versus
> Google Cloud SQL or even both? I get the impression that Google only
> implemented Cloud SQL in order to remain competitive with other PaaS
> offerings.
>
> Thanks,
> Kurt
>
> On Oct 8, 9:13 am, Massimo Di Pierro <massimo.dipie...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > In can do both. In fact you can have a
> > db1=DAL('google:sql://...')
> > and a
> > db2=DAL('google:datastore://...')
> > and store some data in db1 and some in db2.
>
> > I will add this in the howto I plan to write.
>
> > On Oct 7, 11:47 pm, Kurt Fehlhauer <kfehl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > Massimo,
>
> > > I am creating a photo gallery application and have questions in regard
> > > to Google Cloud SQL. Do you have any best-practice advice on storing
> > > images in GAE when using SQL? Should it go in the database as a blob
> > > or should it be stored as a blob property in the Google datastore?
>
> > > Thanks,
> > > Kurt
>
> > > On Oct 6, 7:34 pm, Massimo Di Pierro <massimo.dipie...@gmail.com>
> > > wrote:
>
> > > > I guess this finally relieves me from the non-disclosure agreement ;-)
>
> > > > web2py has already been running on GAE+SQL since March:
>
> > > >      http://web2py-tests.appspot.com/mysql/tests
>
> > > > All web2py apps can now run GAE. Just use a connection string like:
>
> > > >     DAL('google:sql://gmailcom:web2pytests/guestbook')
>
> > > > including:
> > > > - migrations
> > > > - all types of web2py queries (or, joins, like, etc.)
> > > > - transactions
>
> > > > By the week-end I will post a more detailed howto.
> > > > If you have used web2py to build your apps, this is the moment it pays
> > > > off.
>
> > > > Massimo
>
> > > > On Oct 6, 6:29 pm, pbreit <pbreitenb...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > > >http://googlecode.blogspot.com/2011/10/google-cloud-sql-your-database...

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