Le 21/09/2011 19:53, Marcio Merlone a écrit :
Em 21-09-2011 14:45, Alexandre Chapellon escreveu:
Le 21/09/2011 18:56, Marcio Merlone a écrit :
Em 21-09-2011 13:33, Alexandre Chapellon escreveu:
As Gavin pointed out, a 150GB database is
huuuuuuuuuuuge for only a dozen client.
Unless you have billions of files on each client there is
no reason your catalog is that large.
Are you sure you correctly applied job and file retention
on your catalog? Also are you sure you catalog is not full
of orphaned records?
Before migrating to postgres (which is a good choice for
big catalogs), I would look at the catalog to see if all
retention period are correctly applied.
I am running dbcheck to see how many rabbits come out of the
bushes. File table is only 6.6GB and Log is 105GB. What's that
Log table for? It only have blobs...
It is supposed to contain bacula report... just like in the
bacula log file.
I'm not sure having such a big amount of data in another table
hurts, may be it does if you use innodb.
If you use MyISAM... my guess is it should not hurts... but note
I am not a DBA!
Me neither, and it is innodb, in my case.
I'd say It can hurts innodb because, unlike myisam, data are, by
default, stored in one single (huge) file.
However, I'd like to know if this table can be safely purged? As
one day or another it will grow to an unacceptable size... (even
more if I have the same info in logfile).
+1
Can it?
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Alexandre Chapellon
Ingénierie des systèmes open sources et
réseaux.
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All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a
definitive record of customers, application performance, security
threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes
sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy1
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