Remove Benchmarking Remove Event Remove Hardware Remove Metrics
article thumbnail

Why you should benchmark your database using stored procedures

HammerDB

HammerDB uses stored procedures to achieve maximum throughput when benchmarking your database. HammerDB has always used stored procedures as a design decision because the original benchmark was implemented as close as possible to the example workload in the TPC-C specification that uses stored procedures. port 5001 [ 4] local 127.0.0.1

article thumbnail

HammerDB v4.3 New Features Pt1: Graphical Metrics for PostgreSQL

HammerDB

Introducing the PostgreSQL performance metrics viewer. HammerDB included a graphical performance metrics view for the Oracle database only. HammerDB includes the same functionality for PostgreSQL enabling the user to drill down on database metrics in real time. PostgreSQL Graphical Metrics. PostgreSQL Metrics treeview.

Metrics 62
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

HammerDB v4.0 New Features Pt1: TPROC-C & TPROC-H

HammerDB

For example HammerDB has not used tpmC terminology to report TPC-C based metrics instead using TPM and NOPM nomenclature. A full understanding of why this is important requires some knowledge of the evolution of database hardware and software. Event driven scaling (asynchronous clients with keying and thinking time).

C++ 40
article thumbnail

10 tips for migrating from monolith to microservices

Dynatrace

Unsurprisingly, organizations are breaking away from monolithic architectures and moving toward event-driven microservices. End-to-end observability starts with tracking logs, metrics, and traces of all the components, providing a better understanding of service relationships and application dependencies.

article thumbnail

HammerDB for Managers

HammerDB

HammerDB is a software application for database benchmarking. It enables the user to measure database performance and make comparative judgements about database hardware and software. Databases are highly sophisticated software, and to design and run a fair benchmark workload is a complex undertaking. The NOPM Metric.

article thumbnail

Five-nines availability: Always-on infrastructure delivers system availability during the holidays’ peak loads

Dynatrace

Five-nines availability: The ultimate benchmark of system availability. Traditionally, teams achieve this high level of uptime using a combination of high-capacity hardware, system redundancy, and failover models. But is five nines availability attainable? Each decimal point closer to 100 equals higher uptime.

article thumbnail

The Ultimate Guide to Database High Availability

Percona

Defining high availability In general terms, high availability refers to the continuous operation of a system with little to no interruption to end users in the event of hardware or software failures, power outages, or other disruptions. Redundancy is also critical for disaster recovery.