Wesley, what was your biggest surprise?
Big thanx for this one!
--- On Sat, 9/26/09, saidimu apale <saidimu@gmail.com> wrote:
From: saidimu apale <saidimu@gmail.com>
Subject: [Skunkworks] scalability benchmarks
To: "Skunkworks forum" <skunkworks@lists.my.co.ke>
Date: Saturday, September 26, 2009, 7:40 AM-----Inline Attachment Follows-----
http://bulk.fefe.de/
An informative, and fairly technical, read on network and filesystem scalability bechmarks. The first 2-links are Unix-only (*BSD and Linux), the last link includes various Windows and Solaris versions.
What comes out on top? The answer won't surprise you, neither will the identity of the worst-performing OS. What is shocking is how badly some otherwise decent OSes perform. The section on filesystems is also quite interesting: you thought non-journalled filesytems were faster than journalled ones? Think again.
Quick FAQ on the article: O(n) means whatever is being measured proportionally increases as n increases, O(1) means performance is constant no matter how big n is. For instance: if you were measuring the amount of time it takes a webserver to serve requests, an O(n) performance means the time the webserver needs to serve a request increases proportionally to the number of requests; an O(1) performance means it takes the same amount of time for the webserver to serve 1 request as it would a gazillion bazillion requests.
saidi
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