Re: Performance (was: The New Slashdot Setup (includes MySql server))
От | Mitch Vincent |
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Тема | Re: Performance (was: The New Slashdot Setup (includes MySql server)) |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 00cc01bfc198$d05b5720$0300000a@doot.org обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: Performance (was: The New Slashdot Setup (includes MySql server)) ("Matthias Urlichs" <smurf@noris.net>) |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
> ... which helped. A lot. > > Thanks, everybody. The first quick benchmark run I did afterwards states > that PostgreSQL is now only half as fast as MySQL, instead of the factor > of 30 seen previously, on the MySQL benchmark test. ;-) while (horse == DEAD) { beat(); } ... Anyway.. I can see this being true (the MySQL being twice as fast as PostgreSQL) however I don't think that MySQL being faster than PostgreSQL was ever up for debate. When you take a RDBMS and strip out a huge amount of features, of course you're going to get a faster end product. It's just not nearly as safe, feature rich or easy to work with (from a programmers standpoint). I looked at MySQL to use for my applications, for all of ten seconds.... To code in and around, MySQL just isn't a useable RDBMS for me and I can hardly see how it's useful for anyone doing the kind of programming I do.. What it is very good for is something like RADIUS/POP3 authentication, I use it at my ISP to keep all my user authentication in one place... However the only thing I catred about was speed there, and there are all of two things I ever do to that database. I SELECT (once every auth request) and occasionally I INSERT and possibly UPDATE, that coupled with the fact that there are only two to three things in the database per user (username, password and domain for POP3 auth) -- it's just not a very complicated thing to do... I use a SQL backend because it's very easy to maintain and I can easily write software to manipulate the data held in the tables -- that's all. With the other applications I and my company write, it's a totally different story. I just don't see how a person can write any kind of a larger application and not need all the features MySQL lacks... I like MySQL for certain things -- however I've never considered "MySQL vs PostgreSQL" -- they're just two totally different databases for totally different uses IMHO. -Mitch
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