In article <033f01c0de0d$ce93fcc0$230470d1@INSPIRON>, "Dave Cramer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2760874,00.html?chkpt=zdnn0516 > 01 > > It would be great if we could see where postgres fits in this benchmark There are lies, damned lies, and benchmarks. That said (or shamelessly cribbed from Disraeli), I have found that for my current application (an auditing system for the transportation industry), PostgreSQL is 2-4 times faster than DB2 UDB 7.1 for most of our queries. To say that I was suprised is an understatement (no offense to the PostgreSQL crew). The database has a couple dozen tables, the largest is just over 1GB with 3.5 million rows. The database as a whole is over 6GB. This is running PostgreSQL 7.1 under RedHat 7.1 (it was true under RH 6.2, also). Hardware is an IBM Netfinity 7000 (4xPPro200/1M) with 1.5GB RAM and two RAID-5E arrays. My customer is running on a Dell PowerEdge 2400 (2xPIII 866) with 512MB RAM with a RAID-1 and a RAID-10 array. This one is amazingly fast! As always, your mileage may vary, contents may have settled during shipment, and objects in mirror are closer than they appear. Gordon. -- It doesn't get any easier, you just go faster. -- Greg LeMond ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 4: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster