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Date:      Wed, 13 Jun 2012 11:57:25 -0700
From:      Chuck Swiger <cswiger@mac.com>
To:        Simon <simon@optinet.com>
Cc:        "freebsd-questions@freebsd.org" <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: FreeBSD 8.3 + MySQL 5.0.95
Message-ID:  <6F47A2B6-C9FE-47AC-848F-FF3BC5D06373@mac.com>
In-Reply-To: <0M5K00IAFK0DQGR0@st11b01mm-smtpin204.mac.com>
References:  <0M5K00IAFK0DQGR0@st11b01mm-smtpin204.mac.com>

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On Jun 13, 2012, at 11:43 AM, Simon wrote:
> Possible but extremely unlikely, I always had issues whenever I tried to build
> MySQL server myself.

That by itself is interesting.

> The hardware where this is running has been very
> stable. I don't have any issues whatsoever making world, etc...

A make world is a decent stress test, but it doesn't take long enough on
modern hardware to reliably uncover problems.

> There is no segfault which is what usually happens when you have memory
> issues. And why would MySQL community server run stable if it was somehow
> my hardware? Bottom line, if this was hardware issue, the server would have
> paniced long ago.
> 
> I wish I could get some input from someone running MySQL server with 300+
> queries a second and what MySQL version/build they are running.

By all means-- while I'm quite familiar with busy databases, folks aren't running
MySQL for that kind of TPS load.

Regards,
-- 
-Chuck




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