Return-Path: owner-postman Received: from faerie.CS.Berkeley.EDU (faerie.CS.Berkeley.EDU [128.32.37.53]) by nobozo.CS.Berkeley.EDU (8.6.9/8.6.3) with ESMTP id PAA06827 for ; Fri, 25 Nov 1994 15:14:17 -0800 Received: from localhost.Berkeley.EDU (localhost.Berkeley.EDU [127.0.0.1]) by faerie.CS.Berkeley.EDU (8.6.9/8.1B) with SMTP id PAA14226; Fri, 25 Nov 1994 15:14:07 -0800 Message-Id: <199411252314.PAA14226@faerie.CS.Berkeley.EDU> X-Authentication-Warning: faerie.CS.Berkeley.EDU: Host localhost.Berkeley.EDU didn't use HELO protocol From: aoki@CS.Berkeley.EDU (Paul M. Aoki) To: postgres-arch@postgres.Berkeley.EDU Reply-To: aoki@CS.Berkeley.EDU (Paul M. Aoki) Subject: [bmcuyper@etro1.vub.ac.be: Postgres "main memory/optimisation"] Date: Fri, 25 Nov 94 15:14:01 -0800 Sender: aoki@postgres.Berkeley.EDU X-Mts: smtp ------- Forwarded Message From: bmcuyper@etro1.vub.ac.be (Bernard De Cuyper) To: aoki@CS.Berkeley.EDU Subject: Postgres "main memory/optimisation" Date: Fri, 25 Nov 1994 10:37:15 --100 Hi, I have used the "main memory" option, however I would not recommand its use to anyone. It works, but later on, I got stuck when a problem occurs, the postgres system was no more able to retrieve the "mirror classes" using the main memory options. Even if the quantity of data is small ! > * retrieve (mSlice.all)\g > Query sent to backend is "retrieve (mSlice.all)" > WARN:Nov 25 09:37:00:cannot count blocks for mSlice Another observation on speed, is that joins are quite slow on large relations even with hashing indexes. I do not know how the postgres is handelling joins internally, a thing which could be helpfull to rewrite queries in a more suitable way. Sincerely, Bernard bmcuyper@etro.vub.ac.be Dep. ETRO/IRIS Free University of Brussels(VUB) ------- End of Forwarded Message -- Paul M. Aoki | University of California at Berkeley aoki@CS.Berkeley.EDU | Dept. of EECS, Computer Science Division (#1776) | Berkeley, CA 94720-1776