For the past few months, like Baron, Jeremy and Keith, I have been consulting KickFire (formerly
known as C2App). There is another startup currently in stealth
mode with some very impressive solutions for MySQL. Unlike
Kickfire, this other startup isn't SSD based. I was hoping they will be ready for
announcement at the conference as well, but it seems they will
need some more time. I cannot go into much detail on this startup
at this point.
I have been wanting to write on KickFire but I certainly won't be
able to beat Baron. He does a wonderful job in capturing what is
…
Some of you have noticed Kickfire, a new sponsor at this year’s MySQL Conference and Expo. Like Keith Murphy, I have been involved with them for a while now. This article explains the basics of how their technology is different from the current state of the art in complex queries on large amounts of data.
Kickfire is developing a MySQL appliance that combines a pluggable storage engine (for MySQL 5.1) with a new kind of chip. On the surface, the storage engine is not that revolutionary: it is a column-store engine with data compression and some other techniques to reduce disk I/O, which is kind of par for the course in data warehousing today. The chip is the really exciting part of the technology.
The simplest description of their chip is that it …
[Read more]Another great event happening in New York on April 14th is the monthly meeting of the New York Software Industry Association. This month's topic is "Running a Tech Business in NY: Challenges and Payoffs." There is no cost to attend but you must pre-register.
I traveled with Kaj from Paris to Milan, and we went directly to
the Sun offices, where we were received with great friendship and
keen interest.
Franco Roman, Director of Marketing, explained to us how Sun
invests on community activities, from big customers to
university, to open source events.
Then we were joined by the directors of the other departments,
who engaged us in lively exchanges of ideas, where we saw that
our community models are different but easily complement each
other.
There is much to do, but with such is the enthusiasm that is
shown towards MySQL that I have little doubt we will
succeed.
In the afternoon there was the meetup itself. Unlike Paris, it
was held in a conference room, with a wide screen, microphones,
video cameras (it will be published online. Stay tuned). Again,
the participation from Sun employees and managers was really
notable.
Kaj delivered his speech in Italian. The day before …
The Paris meetup was a very charming event. As announced, it was
held in a pub, where beer was the first priority, and the
audience of our (short) speeches were holding glasses and looking
relaxed.
The ensuing conversations were definitely friendly and inspiring.
We met mostly MySQL community, but also Sun employees and Java
developers in search of cross links. Every exchange was lively,
some with a touchy angle. The technical questions led to wine
choices philosophy, university projects, security policies, and
again to the pro and con of living in Paris as an expat. We had a
merry time indeed.
Thanks to Michael, Max, Serge, and especially to Veronique, for
organizing on such a short notice.
A
A
Read this comment:
http://lkml.org/lkml/2001/9/18/74
The funny? Tonight I got an incoming bug fix from a user who had
caught that libmemcached had the old code in it, which of
course... I had copied out of the header code in the Linux
kernel.
Even funnier?
Go look in my_global.h in the MySQL include/ directory.
Guess what?
Same bloody mistake!
Copy and Paste bugs.... got to love them!
(FWIW, I checked, neither Postgres or Apache have the hack, so
they are free of this). The post I reference from lkml is quite
old... I should read up on this and see what the history of this
is. There is probably more here then meets the eye.
Too funny.
I was complaining in an earlier post that I have problems with linux
style installation.
I found a company that can help me solve that!
BitRock
makes open source software easier to use by providing a complete
automated solution for Open Source Application Deployment.
Its quite cool and they have a LAMP stack installer here.
Now I am suggesting that someone at Erlang does it too. They have
a Lyme stack which is Linux + Yaws + Mnesia + Erlang. (a …
Finally!
Buildbot
access for libmemcached:
http://build.tangent.org:8010/
This has taken way too much time. I have been dinking with it
every so often to see if I can get it to work but have made
almost no traction on it.
No luck, until now!
What does this mean? It means I can now get regression tests from
different platforms on each push. AKA less broken pushes, more
testing (for those in the internal MySQL world, think "open
source poll based pushbuild").
I've got some hardware to run this, but I could use more slaves
to do testing. Leave me a message or drop me a piece of email if
you want to add a host for testing. I lack specifically Windows,
FreeBSD, Ubuntu, Solaris (any …