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There are times when auto increment is not sufficient. And there are times when what you need is actually a sequence. Unfortunately MySQL doesn’t have support for sequence. Having been working on PostgreSQL database as well, I found that it’s nextval() function is pretty nice. So in this article, I’d like to emulate (or implement) […]
The MySQL Developers Room at FOSDEM was a success. There was a full room (about 80 seats, and many sitting on the floor) throughout the day. We started at 9am with a talk on PBXT, and ended at 17:00. My talk had a large audience and was very well received.
The enthusiasm was quite high also because of a stunt I did
during the presentation. It was a creative way of explaining the
difference between physical and logical partitioning. I will
repeat this stunt at the MySQL Users Conference, during my Tutorial on Partitioning.
Those who were attending today know about it. For the attendees
at the …
Open source database adoption for BI and data warehousing appears to lag the open source BI and ETL tools. There are lots of reasons for this documented elsewhere, but one reason becoming less valid is performance.
An IDC survey of data warehouse size reported that ~60% of data warehouses are less than a terabyte in size. Several other surveys over the past few years reported similar findings. This tells us that the industry focus on scale-out options is overkill for the majority of people deploying data warehouses. What's needed is cost-effective performance at a scale of less than a terabyte. There are interesting vendors of both close and open source databases and appliances that work well in this size range.
Gartner recently gave some recommendations on open source databases and data warehousing that I think are inappropriate. They suggest MySQL as the only viable option. Part of their rationale is sound: commercial support …
[Read more]Peter Gulutzan and Mark Leith have both written about the new PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA in MySQL. I’ve read through the worklog, or most of it — there were some spots where Firefox seemed to start overlaying parts with other parts, quite weird. But anyway I’ve read as much as I can.
Obviously many people have been [...]
The slides for my Monitoring MySQL talk , which I gave earlier today in an overcrowded MySQl Developersroom at Fosdem are now online, both at my site and at Slideshare
As of now I actually expect people to use those slides for
schoolwork or next year in a main Fosdem track :)
As afterall that is the goal of Open Source and spreading the
word ..
MySQL Monitoring Shoot Out View more presentations from Kris Buytaert. (tags: mysql …
[Read more]
Today I gave an introduction talk of MySQL Cluster at FOSDEM 2009
in Brussels. The room was full and I didn't see anyone
dozing!
A good feedback later on was to show more usecases. This a good
point and I think on working on a talk showing less how it works,
but how it can be used. Doing both technical details and
use-cases is hard to do in 50 mintes.
I feedback is appriciated!
BTW, slide will eventually come online somewhere..
Here’s my sort of transcript of the most important things that were said during the Q&A with Kaj Arno at FOSDEM09. If you have any questions (or corrections if you were there and think i misinterpreted) please use the comments. It is virtually unedited, so it’s rough but I don’t have the time right now to [...]
The MySQL Developers Room at FOSDEM was a success. There was a full room (about 80 seats, and many sitting on the floor) throughout the day. We started at 9am with a talk on PBXT, and ended at 17:00. My talk had a large audience and was very well received.
The enthusiasm was quite high also because of a stunt I did
during the presentation. It was a creative way of explaining the
difference between physical and logical partitioning. I will
repeat this stunt at the MySQL Users Conference, during my Tutorial on Partitioning.
Those who were attending today know about it. For the attendees
at the …
The MySQL Developers Room at FOSDEM was a success. There was a full room (about 80 seats, and many sitting on the floor) throughout the day. We started at 9am with a talk on PBXT, and ended at 17:00. My talk had a large audience and was very well received.
The enthusiasm was quite high also because of a stunt I did
during the presentation. It was a creative way of explaining the
difference between physical and logical partitioning. I will
repeat this stunt at the MySQL Users Conference, during my Tutorial on Partitioning.
Those who were attending today know about it. For the attendees
at the …