Обсуждение: Which Linux Distribution
We are about to launch a very large client/server environment and before we lock down the production servers I thought I would as if there is a particular linux distribution that keeps up or postgresql is designed for more than another. I know that linux is linux but which linux (if any) is used for development testing. Also I haven't had many comments about my last post I have included it below as well: **************************************************************************** ********** Subject: [ADMIN] Load of 4 Million Queries Read and or Write Per Second **************************************************************************** ********** That is 4 Million Queries per Second which is 14 Billion 400 Million per hour. This may sound a little big but this is what we will be launching on the 1st December 2000 using postgresql and php. It is a new generation client/server environment that allows communication/transactions and information storage for b2b, b2c and p2p. Does anyone have a qlue what will happen and what should I order now to replace the box we have and what size space should I clear in the office/warehouse for expansion. I am serious and would like some feedback and input. **************************************************************************** ********** Thanks for everyones assistance in my current project it has been a learning curve from commercial and mysql to postgresql. Hitcho has Spoken. Timothy Hitchens (Hitcho) tim@hitcho.com.au
* Timothy J Hitchens <tim@hitcho.com.au> [001123 13:35] wrote: > We are about to launch a very large client/server environment and before we > lock down the production servers I thought I > would as if there is a particular linux distribution that keeps up or > postgresql is designed for more than another. I know > that linux is linux but which linux (if any) is used for development > testing. I use FreeBSD over here. > Also I haven't had many comments about my last post I have included it below > as well: > > **************************************************************************** > ********** > Subject: [ADMIN] Load of 4 Million Queries Read and or Write Per Second > **************************************************************************** > ********** > > That is 4 Million Queries per Second which is 14 Billion 400 Million per > hour. > > This may sound a little big but this is what we will be launching on the 1st > December 2000 using postgresql and php. What platform is this going to be on? You will not be able to do 4 million queries per second with Postgresql on a PC platform. -- -Alfred Perlstein - [bright@wintelcom.net|alfred@freebsd.org] "I have the heart of a child; I keep it in a jar on my desk."
* Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net> [001123 14:33] wrote: > * Timothy J Hitchens <tim@hitcho.com.au> [001123 13:35] wrote: > > > > That is 4 Million Queries per Second which is 14 Billion 400 Million per > > hour. > > > > This may sound a little big but this is what we will be launching on the 1st > > December 2000 using postgresql and php. > > What platform is this going to be on? You will not be able to do > 4 million queries per second with Postgresql on a PC platform. You do realize that even a 800Mhz Pentium that the math makes this practically impossible: 800Mhz == 8,000,000 cycles per second divided by 4,000,000 queries per second = 2 cycles per query Those two cycles are spent even before the server gets to parse the query. What are you trying to do here? -- -Alfred Perlstein - [bright@wintelcom.net|alfred@freebsd.org] "I have the heart of a child; I keep it in a jar on my desk."
* Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net> [001123 15:04] wrote: > * Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net> [001123 14:33] wrote: > > * Timothy J Hitchens <tim@hitcho.com.au> [001123 13:35] wrote: > > > > > > That is 4 Million Queries per Second which is 14 Billion 400 Million per > > > hour. > > > > > > This may sound a little big but this is what we will be launching on the 1st > > > December 2000 using postgresql and php. > > > > What platform is this going to be on? You will not be able to do > > 4 million queries per second with Postgresql on a PC platform. > > You do realize that even a 800Mhz Pentium that the math makes > this practically impossible: > > 800Mhz == 8,000,000 cycles per second > divided by 4,000,000 queries per second > = 2 cycles per query er, turkey makes me a bit groggy, that should have been: 800,000,000 4,000,000 still about 200 cycles per query. I don't see how that's possible. -- -Alfred Perlstein - [bright@wintelcom.net|alfred@freebsd.org] "I have the heart of a child; I keep it in a jar on my desk."
Alfred Perlstein wrote: > * Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net> [001123 14:33] wrote: > > * Timothy J Hitchens <tim@hitcho.com.au> [001123 13:35] wrote: > > > That is 4 Million Queries per Second which is 14 Billion 400 Million per > > > hour. > > > This may sound a little big but this is what we will be launching on the 1st > > > December 2000 using postgresql and php. > > What platform is this going to be on? You will not be able to do > > 4 million queries per second with Postgresql on a PC platform. > You do realize that even a 800Mhz Pentium that the math makes > this practically impossible: Then use Linux for S/390 and PostgreSQL on S/390. Use big iron for big iron tasks. If he's really expecting this big of load (that would make such a cluster qualify for one of the top slots on the TPC-C benchmarks, incidentally!), then he should have enough money to buy a largish S/390 -- after all, the bandwidth to serve the pages of such a large number of queries is going to be huge -- even America Online is only serving an estimated 28 kilopages per second with their server farm. -- Lamar Owen WGCR Internet Radio 1 Peter 4:11
What about using a Beowolf cluster. We are really interested in a online music stor but donot have the money. Well -- as per as bandwidth is concerned - GOOD LUCK. For us we are not planning to launch it in internet, only planning to serve it through local cable in Indian metro cities. Lamar Owen wrote: > Alfred Perlstein wrote: > > * Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net> [001123 14:33] wrote: > > > * Timothy J Hitchens <tim@hitcho.com.au> [001123 13:35] wrote: > > > > That is 4 Million Queries per Second which is 14 Billion 400 Million per > > > > hour. > > > > > This may sound a little big but this is what we will be launching on the 1st > > > > December 2000 using postgresql and php. > > > > What platform is this going to be on? You will not be able to do > > > 4 million queries per second with Postgresql on a PC platform. > > > You do realize that even a 800Mhz Pentium that the math makes > > this practically impossible: > > Then use Linux for S/390 and PostgreSQL on S/390. Use big iron for big > iron tasks. > > If he's really expecting this big of load (that would make such a > cluster qualify for one of the top slots on the TPC-C benchmarks, > incidentally!), then he should have enough money to buy a largish S/390 > -- after all, the bandwidth to serve the pages of such a large number of > queries is going to be huge -- even America Online is only serving an > estimated 28 kilopages per second with their server farm. > -- > Lamar Owen > WGCR Internet Radio > 1 Peter 4:11
* Lockhurst <lockhurst@cal2.vsnl.net.in> [001212 07:54] wrote: > What about using a Beowolf cluster. We are really interested in > a online music stor but donot have the money. Well -- as per as > bandwidth is concerned - GOOD LUCK. For us we are not planning to > launch it in internet, only planning to serve it through local > cable in Indian metro cities. What about it? (the Beowolf cluster) A Beowolf cluster doesn't suddenly allow Postgresql to run on multiple machines whilke acting as a single entity, there's libraries that Postgresql must be ported to use afaik. -Alfred