Originally posted by minestrone
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I'd expect the first problem to be more difficult to resolve assuming pessimistic scenario (many IPs, TCP/IP used on many sockets etc) -
I am not asking for your solutions I am asking quite clearly...Originally posted by AtW View PostI'd expect the first problem to be more difficult to resolve assuming pessimistic scenario (many IPs, TCP/IP used on many sockets etc)
Can I just ask what you think is more problematic for a web server.
"1 table with one text field of 140 chars if that gets accessed 1 million times in 1 second"
"1 person accessing 140 million chars in one second"Comment
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It's a trick question. A web server couldn't do the first one without forwarding the request to a database.Originally posted by minestrone View PostI am not asking for your solutions I am asking quite clearly...
Can I just ask what you think is more problematic for a web server.
"1 table with one text field of 140 chars if that gets accessed 1 million times in 1 second"
"1 person accessing 140 million chars in one second"
A 1/4 million hits per second for static web content is doable on a single dual xeon box using an in memory cache though and I don't see why that wouldn't scale fairly well to more hardware.
So it would seem like the DB is going to be a bottleneck.While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'Comment
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Not if you get requests from 1/4 million unique IPs over TCP/IP.Originally posted by doodab View PostA 1/4 million hits per second for static web content is doable
Is it just me who thinks minestrone is an idiot?Comment
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Who said anything about any database in this scenario? We are talking about self contained webserver that has got 140 byte file (possibly cached) and 140 MB file (also possibly cached).Originally posted by doodab View PostIt's a trick question. A web server couldn't do the first one without forwarding the request to a database.
In one case it gets hit with 1 mln requests for 140 bytes and in another 1 requests for 140 MB.
I know I'd prefer the latter scenario and if the user has not got bandwidth to get data file in 1 second then it's problem beyond webserver.Comment
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Why not? You think setup and tear down of the connections would be a problem?Originally posted by AtW View PostNot if you get requests from 1/4 million unique IPs.
I might have to do some more experiments. That's the trouble with being benched, no access to proper hardware for ******* about.While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'Comment
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It was you who said that scaling front end web stuff was easy, then Soupy was talking about tables and fields. Perhaps he meant it would be a picnic?Originally posted by AtW View PostWho said anything about any database in this scenario? We are talking about self contained webserver that has got 140 byte file (possibly cached) and 140 MB file (also possibly cached).While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'Comment
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I think you'll run out of TCP/IP sockets.Originally posted by doodab View PostWhy not? You think setup and tear down of the connections would be a problem?Comment
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It does not say database here, text field can be in memcache or on disk.Originally posted by minestrone View PostIf I have 1 table with one text field of 140 chars if that gets accessed 1 million times in 1 second that is easier to run than 1 person accessing 140 million chars in one second.
If you keep 140 MB file in a database then you are an idiot.Comment
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