On Thu, Nov 20, 2008 at 4:06 PM, Scott Marlowe <scott.marlowe@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 20, 2008 at 4:36 PM, snacktime <snacktime@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Right now we are running mysql as that is what was there when I
>> entered the scene. We might switch to postgres, but I'm not sure if
>> postgres makes this any easier.
>>
>> We run a couple of popular games on social networking sites. These
>> games have a simple economy,and we need to be able to time warp the
>> economy back in time, which means reverting a whole lot of
>> transactions and inventories. Our games generate around 1 million
>> user transactions per hour, which results in inserts/updates on 4
>> times that many rows. Using PIT recovery would be a very reliable
>> way to accomplish this, but I'm wondering how long it would take. If
>> it takes a full day to roll back an hour of game time, then I need to
>> find another solution.
>
> PITR is pretty fast, since it sequentially applies changes to the
> database as fast as it can. Your hardware has a lot to do with this
> though. Applying changes to a machine with plenty of memory, fast
> CPUs, and a big rockin RAID-10 array will of course be much faster
> than doing the same thing on a laptop.
>
> If you make "base" sets every night at midnight with snapshots, then
> it shouldn't take too long. Is this gonna be a regular thing, or is
> this more of an occasional occurance when things in the game go
> horribly wrong?
>
It's primarily for when a bug screws up the economy, or if someone
finds a way to hack the economy. Unfortunately these things happen
now and then. Plus, these games are relatively short lived. We might
get a million users the first month, but a year later the game is
dead. So a generic solution using something like PITR would be good.
It's not worth it to do it in code with the game having such a short
lifespan.
Chris