On 09/16/10 12:42, Guido Falsi wrote:

Related to this, I have a question.

Is it convenient to put databases on a compresed filesystem? Apart from
the space advantage, does it give any speed advantage/penalty?

It depends on what you do. It will not save you memory usage either since data needs to be decompressed when read.

If the database is lightly loaded I don't think there will ever be problems. Also if the database is mostly read-only. If it's used in a heavy loaded read+write environment or if it is CPU-bound, it is probably a bad idea to put it on a compressed file system.

Anyone has some benchmark or objective data about this?

I know about this one:

http://don.blogs.smugmug.com/2008/10/13/zfs-mysqlinnodb-compression-update/

But it only really measures copy (cp) speeds and compression, not database performance.

Also are we talking about MyISAM or InnoDB tables? Or a mix of those?

MyISAM would probably be faster to compress and manage :)

http://www.scribd.com/doc/14603831/Optimizing-MySQL-Performance-with-ZFS

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