The Open Source Developers' Conference 2007 Brisbane program schedule is now
online!
Registrations are coming along nicely, but it's a bit too early
to project possible total numbers.
The organisers have decided that if you register after October
31st, you don't get a conference T-shirt. Nanana.
But seriously.... Elspeth needs time to get them printed, and
producing lots extra of various sizes gets silly.
So no worries, unless you slack and don't register soon...
earlybird ($275) ends October 14th, after that it'll be $295
until October 31st, and from November 1st you lose your shirt and
pay $325.
Full (non-student) registrations include the Wednesday conference
dinner, until sold out.
I am considering taking some time off work to concentrate deeply on MySQL Table Sync, which has been getting usage in very large companies whose names we all know. There are a lot of bugs and feature requests outstanding for it. It is overly complex, needs a lot of work, and I can’t do it in one-hour or even three-hour chunks. I need to focus on it. I’m considering asking for a bounty of $2500 USD for this.
This release of MySQL Toolkit updates MySQL Parallel Dump. Together you and I found a few bugs in it (table locking, argument quoting, exit status code). The restore utility is in progress.
In this Zimbra Administrator's PowerTip, we'll discuss how to
move your instance of Zimbra to another machine. It applies to
all version of Zimbra.
Administrator's PowerTip #4: October 09, 2007
Zimbra
Forums - Zimbra wiki - Zimbra Blog
Introduction Either you, or someone you know has been there.
Almost out of Disk space, RAM is topped out, and the CPU is
constantly running above 80%. It's time to upgrade the hardware.
But how easy and safe is it to move the Zimbra server instance?
Well, it's easier than you might think.
In this Zimbra Administrator's PowerTip, we'll discuss how to
migrate your Zimbra server to another Machine or OS. The one big
caveat is that both instances of Zimbra MUST be running the same
version. So if your old server is …
aka…..”when good queries go bad!”
So, today the developers were debugging why a script was running much longer than expected. They were doing text database inserts, and got to the point where they realized that double the amount of text meant the queries took double the amount of time.
You see, they were doing similar text inserts over and over, instead of using connection pooling and/or batching them. Apparently the other DBA explained that it was a limitation of MySQL, but either the developers didn’t convey what they were doing well, or the DBA didn’t think to mention batching.
I ran a simple test on a test server. I used the commandline to connect to a db server on the same machine (even though in qa and production the db machine is on a different machine) just to make a point:
| Type | Connects | Queries |
|---|
…
[Read more]
aka…..”when good queries go bad!”
So, today the developers were debugging why a script was running
much longer than expected. They were doing text database inserts,
and got to the point where they realized that double the amount
of text meant the queries took double the amount of time.
You see, they were doing similar text inserts over and over,
instead of using connection pooling and/or batching them.
Apparently the other DBA explained that it was a limitation of
MySQL, but either the developers didn’t convey what they were
doing well, or the DBA didn’t think to mention batching. More »
New Page 1
MySQL is one of the world's most popular open source databases, and it is widely used and becoming the database-of-choice for many leading Web 2.0 sites. Like most database servers, the most common bottleneck in the enterprise environment encountered by MySQL is disk I/O. To maximize the performance of MySQL for disk I/O bound workloads on the Solaris operating system on CMT servers (e.g. the Sun Fire T2000 Server), configuration and tuning of MySQL server variables is critical and can make a big difference to performance, as does the optimization of the Solaris filesystem for MySQL, and the configuration of storage arrays.
Configuration Issues
MySQL server's performance can be optimized using various configuration settings. The first step is to read the configuration and system variables by running the command:
mysql> show variables;
…
[Read more]New Page 1
MySQL is one of the world's most popular open source databases, and it is widely used and becoming the database-of-choice for many leading Web 2.0 sites. Like most database servers, the most common bottleneck in the enterprise environment encountered by MySQL is disk I/O. To maximize the performance of MySQL for disk I/O bound workloads on the Solaris operating system on CMT servers (e.g. the Sun Fire T2000 Server), configuration and tuning of MySQL server variables is critical and can make a big difference to performance, as does the optimization of the Solaris filesystem for MySQL, and the configuration of storage arrays.
Configuration Issues
MySQL server's performance can be optimized using various configuration settings. The first step is to read the configuration and system variables by running the command:
mysql> show variables;
…
[Read more]New Page 1
MySQL is one of the world's most popular open source databases, and it is widely used and becoming the database-of-choice for many leading Web 2.0 sites. Like most database servers, the most common bottleneck in the enterprise environment encountered by MySQL is disk I/O. To maximize the performance of MySQL for disk I/O bound workloads on the Solaris operating system on CMT servers (e.g. the Sun Fire T2000 Server), configuration and tuning of MySQL server variables is critical and can make a big difference to performance, as does the optimization of the Solaris filesystem for MySQL, and the configuration of storage arrays.
Configuration Issues
MySQL server's performance can be optimized using various configuration settings. The first step is to read the configuration and system variables by running the command:
mysql> show variables;
…
[Read more]