Thanks for the links, that's good to know.
Personally I'm very happy with my computer's performance using VMWare, but I've used Linux as my primary OS now for ~8.5 years, so I'm a bit biased
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MiamiVIce80 wrote:my setup:
Intel E6750 + 8GB RAM running Windows Vista Buisness x64 with two Raid0 drives 1. raid0: 2xSeagate ST3250410AS (2x232.8gb) (OS and pg_xlog) 2. raid0: 2xWD 6400AAKS (2x596.1gb) (postgres-data)
That is not close to a server setup.The performance is really nice. But there are some disadvantages. Windows Vista doesnt use the RAM very well, e.g. the maximum RAM u could assign to a postgres thread is 1GB. And the normal PT3 setup is that there is a single connection to the database. 2 years ago i tried Windows Server 2003 and i had the same problem. If i raised shared_buffers over 1GB in postgres.conf, postgres didnt start. I´m not that used to microsoft server products. I
My solution atm is that i split observed databases into parts of 10mio hands each database. That is a size that my system handels well.
Atm i build a Linux Server which will run postgres and i will use my Windows PC for playing poker. I guess it will be a little bit slower, but more stable and will take some load form my Windows Vista.
kraada wrote:I use virtualization but in the other direction, so I can't say for sure how effective putting Linux in a VM is going to be, but this page can get you started if you want to give it a try -- good luck, personally I use Ubuntu so I can help you there the easiest if you need it. It's more of a full desktop system though so I'm not sure it's the best for these need, though anything tailored specifically to your needs is likely going to be harder to set up . . .
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