What are the hardware specifications of you dbmail server ? How many users do you have ? How many email do you process each day ?
Bien à vous Jacques Beaudoin Agent d'administration Les services des technologies de l'information et des communications Commission scolaire de la Pointe de l'Île Montréal, Québec, Canada Selon "\"Simon Gray\"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Hi, > > I've been looking through ways of optimizing our dbmail setup. Other > than rearranging the indexing and reducing the number of queries, I was > thinking about moving some of the temporary tables over to the mysql > heap(memory) engine type instead of myisam/innodb since the content of > these tables aren't permanent and only used short term. > > If these tables were in memory it should remove some database i/o > overhead from the dbmail-smtp/pop3/imap process. > > The only down side I can see to using heap is that it doesn't support > auto-increment and database data is lost on restart, other than that > might make a slight improvement on speed for busy setups. > > Lots of the tables seem to contain a unique index on a primary key, > which seems a bit odd since a primary key needs to be unique by default. > A primary key alone should be fine? > > > In some cases messages table has a primary key, key and unique index all > on the same row (again surely only a primary key is needed?). Such as > the users table there are the following: > > PRIMARY KEY (user_idnr), > KEY user_idnr (user_idnr, userid), > UNIQUE useridnr_2 (user_idnr, userid), > UNIQUE userid_2 (userid) > > Surely just PRIMARY KEY (user_idnr, userid) should do fine? > > I'm by no means a database expert, but just looking towards ways of > helping dbmail scale better. > > Does anyone have any thoughts on this? > > Simon > > _______________________________________________ > Dbmail mailing list > Dbmail@dbmail.org > https://mailman.fastxs.nl/mailman/listinfo/dbmail >