Video for the presentation at the 2009 MySQL Camp:
Top 10 MySQL Pet Peeves and How to Workaround Them
Jeremy Zawodny
Watch it online here:
Download the 106 Mb .mov file at <
Video for the presentation at the 2009 MySQL Camp:
Top 10 MySQL Pet Peeves and How to Workaround Them
Jeremy Zawodny
Watch it online here:
Download the 106 Mb .mov file at <
Video for the presentation at the 2009 MySQL Conference:
The ScaleDB Storage Engine: Enabling High Performance and
Scalability Using Materialized Views and a Shared-Disk Clustering
Architecture
Moshe Shadmon (ScaleDB)
The official conference page is at http://www.mysqlconf.com/mysql2009/public/schedule/detail/7112
Now that MySQL 5.4 (internally code named performance version or summit) is officially released, I can tell you that I used MySQL 5.4 alpha for my Nehalem scaling studies in my earlier blog - MySQL Scalability on Nehalem systems (Sun Fire X4270). I am waiting to get hold of a 4 socket Nehalem system to see we scale; but that will have to wait for the MySQL conference to get over.
Allan managed to get slightly higher Sysbench Read-Only numbers than mine using the latest MySQL 5.4. Interestingly Solaris does better than Linux. Probably a bug since many of the optimizations in MySQL 5.4 are OS independent. But then a lot can happen in 12 months
Video from the 2009 MySQL Conference presentation:
If You Love It, Break It: Testing MySQL with the Random Query Generator Philip Stoev (Sun Microsystems)
The description is at:
http://www.mysqlconf.com/mysql2009/public/schedule/detail/6363
Download the presentation slides (ppt).
Now that MySQL 5.4 (internally code named performance version or summit) is officially released, I can tell you that I used MySQL 5.4 alpha for my Nehalem scaling studies in my earlier blog - MySQL Scalability on Nehalem systems (Sun Fire X4270). I am waiting to get hold of a 4 socket Nehalem system to see we scale; but that will have to wait for the MySQL conference to get over.
Allan managed to get slightly higher Sysbench Read-Only numbers than mine using the latest MySQL 5.4. Interestingly Solaris does better than Linux. Probably a bug since many of the optimizations in MySQL 5.4 are OS independent. But then a lot can happen in 12 months
Now that MySQL 5.4 (internally code named performance version or summit) is officially released, I can tell you that I used MySQL 5.4 alpha for my Nehalem scaling studies in my earlier blog - MySQL Scalability on Nehalem systems (Sun Fire X4270). I am waiting to get hold of a 4 socket Nehalem system to see we scale; but that will have to wait for the MySQL conference to get over.
Allan managed to get slightly higher Sysbench Read-Only numbers than mine using the latest MySQL 5.4. Interestingly Solaris does better than Linux. Probably a bug since many of the optimizations in MySQL 5.4 are OS independent. But then a lot can happen in 12 months
Today Sun Microsystems announced MySQL 5.4, a release that focuses on performance and scalability. For a long time it's been possible to escape the confines of a single system with MySQL, thanks to scale-out technologies like replication and sharding. But it ought to be possible to scale-up efficiently as well - to fully utilize the CPU resource on a server with a single instance.
MySQL 5.4 takes a stride in that direction. It features a number of performance and scalability fixes, including the justifiably-famous Google SMP patch along with a range of other fixes. And there's plenty more to come in future releases. For specifics about the MySQL 5.4 fixes, check out Mikael Ronstrom's blog.
So how well does MySQL 5.4 scale? To help answer the question I'm going to take a look at some performance data from one of Sun's CMT systems based on the UltraSPARC T2 chip. This …
[Read more]Today Sun Microsystems announced MySQL 5.4, a release that focuses on performance and scalability. For a long time it's been possible to escape the confines of a single system with MySQL, thanks to scale-out technologies like replication and sharding. But it ought to be possible to scale-up efficiently as well - to fully utilize the CPU resource on a server with a single instance.
MySQL 5.4 takes a stride in that direction. It features a number of performance and scalability fixes, including the justifiably-famous Google SMP patch along with a range of other fixes. And there's plenty more to come in future releases. For specifics about the MySQL 5.4 fixes, check out Mikael Ronstrom's blog.
So how well does MySQL 5.4 scale? To help answer the question I'm going to take a look at some performance data from one of Sun's CMT systems based on the UltraSPARC T2 chip. This …
[Read more]Today Sun Microsystems announced MySQL 5.4, a release that focuses on performance and scalability. For a long time it's been possible to escape the confines of a single system with MySQL, thanks to scale-out technologies like replication and sharding. But it ought to be possible to scale-up efficiently as well - to fully utilize the CPU resource on a server with a single instance.
MySQL 5.4 takes a stride in that direction. It features a number of performance and scalability fixes, including the justifiably-famous Google SMP patch along with a range of other fixes. And there's plenty more to come in future releases. For specifics about the MySQL 5.4 fixes, check out Mikael Ronstrom's blog.
So how well does MySQL 5.4 scale? To help answer the question I'm going to take a look at some performance data from one of Sun's CMT systems based on the UltraSPARC T2 chip. This …
[Read more]One last reminder, we ( Yves and I ) will be appearing all over the place at the UC. Here is a quick run down of our schedule: