Am 31.01.2016 09:09, schrieb Sergei Golubchik:
Hi, Reindl!
On Jan 30, Reindl Harald wrote:
Am 30.01.2016 um 21:07 schrieb walter harms:
Aktualy I do now some profiling now we want to see the differences when switching 31-1. We used myISAM since the biggest problem is speed and immoDB showed to be crash sensitive. We store long time series data so the system is writing data all the time.
for "writing data all the time" MyISAM is for sure a completly wrong decision because the performance strength of MyISAM was always on most-read workloads
MyISAM *always* does a *complete table lock* for writes and don't allow concurrent writes without locking - that don't scale when you write all day long and there are table locks all day long
MyISAM should perform very good if inserts are *append only* (no updates or deletes). In this case MyISAM will not use an exclusive table lock and concurrent reads will be allowed.
It is typical for some kind of logging - one threads inserts *all the time* other threads are reading the data concurrently.
In fact, this is one of the use cases MyISAM was written for.
This is was we actualy do with, never delete, very few updates and read is no performance problem. "crash sensitive" translates into: We had 3-4 occassions where an full backup was needed, and all had all to do with immoDB tables broken beyond repair. re, wh