Re: Loading the entire DB into RAM

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If memory serves me correctly I have seen several posts about this in the past.

I'll try to recall highlights.

1. Create a md in linux sufficiently large enough to handle the data set you are wanting to store.
2. Create a HD based copy somewhere as your permanent storage mechanism.
3. Start up your PostgreSQL instance with the MD as the data store
4. Load your data to the MD instance.
5. Figure out how you will change indexes _and_ ensure that your disk storage is consistent with your MD instance.

I haven't done so, but it would be interesting to have a secondary database somewhere that is your primary storage. It needn't be especially powerful, or even available. It serves as the place to generate your indexing data. You could then use SLONY to propogate the data to the MD production system.

Of course, if you are updating your system that resides in ram, you should be thinking the other way. Have SLONY replicate changes to the other, permanent storage, system.

Either way you do it, I can't think of an out of the box method to doing it. Somehow one has to transfer data from permanent storage to the md instance, and, likewise, back to permanent storage.

Out of curiosity, what are you using as the search engine?


Charles A. Landemaine wrote:
I have a web server with PostgreSQL and RHEL. It hosts a search
engine, and each time some one makes a query, it uses the HDD Raid
array. The DB is not very big, it is less than a GB. I plan to add
more RAM anyway.

What I'd like to do is find out how to keep the whole DB in RAM so
that each time some one does a query, it doesn't use the HDD. Is it
possible, if so, how?
Thanks,

Charles.

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