Re: Oracle Standard Edition & RAC
- From: "Niall Litchfield" <niall.litchfield@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: kevinc@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Thu, 4 Jan 2007 06:41:01 +0000
Well on systems with 2 or 4 processors typically doing small amounts of work
at a time for say 2-500 concurrent users and often with an overnight window
for batch, how much benefit is PQO in practice? I'd probably also suggest
that if you do want PQO then there is a fair chance that you'll want
Partitioning as well, so you'd probably have to really, really want to make
that extra investment.
On 1/3/07, Kevin Closson <kevinc@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
My default position is that for many OLTP apps people will find that SE
does them just fine - it's the 4 processor/core limit and on 64bit platforms
the ram limits that will mostly create a need to go to EE.
But how do sites get along without PQO? I really do not understand that.
--
Niall Litchfield
Oracle DBA
http://www.orawin.info
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My default position is that for many OLTP apps people will find that SE does them just fine - it's the 4 processor/core limit and on 64bit platforms the ram limits that will mostly create a need to go to EE. But how do sites get along without PQO? I really do not understand that.
- RE: Oracle Standard Edition & RAC
- From: Kevin Closson
- Re: Oracle Standard Edition & RAC
- From: Niall Litchfield
- RE: Oracle Standard Edition & RAC
- From: Kevin Closson