Re: Hardware suggestions for maximum read performance

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3x200GB suggests you want to use RAID5?

Perhaps you should just pick 2x200GB and set them to RAID1. With roughly 200GB of storage, that should still easily house your "potentially 10GB"-database with ample of room to allow the SSD's to balance the writes. But you save the investment and its probably a bit faster with writes (although your raid-card may reduce or remove the differences with your workload).

You can then either keep the money or invest in faster cpu's. With few concurrent connections the E5-2643 (also a quad core, but with 3.3GHz cores rather than 2.4GHz) may be interesting. Its obviously a bit of speculation to see whether that would help, but it should speed up sorts and other in-memory/cpu-operations (even if you're not - and never will be - cpu-bound right now).

Best regards,

Arjen

On 3-5-2013 1:11 Mike McCann wrote:
Hello,

We are in the fortunate situation of having more money than time to help
solve our PostgreSQL 9.1 performance problem.

Our server hosts databases that are about 1 GB in size with the largest
tables having order 10 million 20-byte indexed records. The data are
loaded once and then read from a web app and other client programs.
  Some of the queries execute ORDER BY on the results. There are
typically less than a dozen read-only concurrent connections to any one
database.

SELECTs for data are taking 10s of seconds. We'd like to reduce this to
web app acceptable response times (less than 1 second). If this is
successful then the size of the database will grow by a factor of ten -
we will still want sub-second response times.  We are in the process of
going through the excellent suggestions in the "PostgreSQL 9.0 High
Performance" book to identify the bottleneck (we have reasonable
suspicions that we are I/O bound), but would also like to place an order
soon for the dedicated server which will host the production databases.
Here are the specs of a server that we are considering with a budget of
$13k US:

    HP ProLiant DL360p Gen 8
    Dual Intel Xeon 2.4GHz 4-core E5-2609 CPUs
    64GB RAM
    2x146GB 15K SAS hard drives
    3x200GB SATA SLC SSDs
    + the usual accessories (optical drive, rail kit, dual power supplies)

Opinions?

Thanks in advance for any suggestions you have.

-Mike

--
Mike McCann
Software Engineer
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
7700 Sandholdt Road
Moss Landing, CA 95039-9644
Voice: 831.775.1769  Fax: 831.775.1736 http://www.mbari.org



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