From: | "Mark Woodward" <pgsql(at)mohawksoft(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | "Jim C(dot) Nasby" <jnasby(at)pervasive(dot)com> |
Cc: | "Christopher Kings-Lynne" <chris(dot)kings-lynne(at)calorieking(dot)com>, "Rod Taylor" <pg(at)rbt(dot)ca>, "Hannu Krosing" <hannu(at)skype(dot)net>, "Christopher Browne" <cbbrowne(at)acm(dot)org>, pgsql-hackers(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: vacuum, performance, and MVCC |
Date: | 2006-06-27 13:03:55 |
Message-ID: | 18037.24.91.171.78.1151413435.squirrel@mail.mohawksoft.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-hackers |
> On Fri, Jun 23, 2006 at 06:37:01AM -0400, Mark Woodward wrote:
>> While we all know session data is, at best, ephemeral, people still want
>> some sort of persistence, thus, you need a database. For mcache I have a
>> couple plugins that have a wide range of opitions, from read/write at
>> startup and shut down, to full write through cache to a database.
>>
>> In general, my clients don't want this, they want the database to store
>> their data. When you try to explain to them that a database may not be
>> the
>> right place to store this data, they ask why, sadly they have little
>> hope
>> of understanding the nuances and remain unconvinced.
>
> Have you done any benchmarking between a site using mcache and one not?
> I'll bet there's a huge difference, which translates into hardware $$.
> That's something managers can understand.
>
Last benchmark I did was on a pure data level, a couple years ago,
PostgreSQL could handle about 800 session transactions a second, but
degraded over time, MCache was up about 7500 session transactions a second
and held steady. I should dig up that code and make it available on my
site.
I have a couple users that tell me that their sites couldn't work without
it, not even with MySQL.
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