Fortunately, there are two software tactics that offer the possibility of dramatically better performance. This section
discusses these tactics, which can be used individually or together.
Vertical partitioning via column-oriented database architectures [6]: Existing shared-nothing
databases partition data "horizontally" by distributing the rows of each table across both multiple
nodes and multiple disks on each node. Recent research has focused on an interesting
alternative: partitioning data vertically so that different columns in a table are stored in different
files. While still providing an SQL interface to users, these "column-oriented" databases,
particularly when coupled with horizontal partitioning in a shared-nothing architecture, offer
tremendous performance advantages.
For example, in a typical data warehouse query that accesses only a few columns from each
table, the DBMS need only read the desired columns from disk, ignoring the other columns that
do not appear in the query. In contrast, a conventional, row-oriented DBMS must read all
columns whether they are used in the query or not. In round numbers, this will mean that a column store reads 10 to 100 times less data from disk, resulting in a dramatic performance
advantage relative to a row store, both running on the same shared-nothing commodity
hardware.
Compression-aware databases [1]: It is clear to any observer of the computing scene that
CPUs are getting faster at an incredible rate. Moreover, CPUs will increasingly come packaged
with multiple cores, possibly 10 or more, in the near future. Hence, the cost of computation is
plummeting. In contrast, disks are getting much bigger and much cheaper in cost per byte, but
they are not getting any faster in terms of the bandwidth between disk and main memory.
Hence, the cost of moving a byte from disk to main memory is getting increasingly expensive,
relative to the cost of processing that byte. This suggests that it would be smart to trade some
of the cheap resource (CPU) to save the expensive resource (disk bandwidth). The clear way
to do this is through data compression.
A multitude of compression approaches, each tailored to a specific type and representation of
data, have been developed, and there are new database designs that incorporate these
compression techniques throughout query execution. In round numbers, a system that uses
compression will yield a database that is one third the size (and that needs one third the disks).
More importantly, only one-third the number of bytes will be brought into main memory,
compared to a system that uses no compression. This will result in dramatically better I/O
performance.
However, there are two additional points to note. First, some systems, such as Oracle and
SybaseIQ, store compressed data on the disk, but decompress it immediately when it is brought
into main memory. Other systems, notably Vertica, do not decompress the data until it must be
delivered to the user. An execution engine that runs on compressed data is dramatically more
efficient than a conventional one that doesn't run on compressed data. The former accesses
less data from main memory, and copies and/or writes less data to main memory, resulting in
better L2 cache performance and fewer reads and writes to main memory.
Second, a column store can compress data more effectively than a row store. The reason is
that every data element on a disk block comes from a single column, and therefore is of the
same data type. Hence, a column-based database execution engine only has to compress
elements of a single data type, rather than elements from many data types, resulting in a three-
fold improvement in compression over row-based database execution engines.
What You Can Do
The message to be taken away from this article is straightforward: You can obtain a scalable
database system with high performance at low cost by using the following tactics.
1) Use a shared-nothing architecture. Anything else will be much less scalable.
2) Build your architecture from commodity parts. There is no reason why the cost of a gr
should exceed $700 per (CPU, disk) pair. If you are paying more, then you are offerin
a vendor a guided tour through your wallet.
3) Get a DBMS with compression. This is a good idea today, and will become an even
better idea tomorrow. It offers about a factor of three performance improvement.
4) Use a column-store database. These are 10 to 100 times faster than a row-store
database on star-schema warehouse queries.
5) Make sure your column-store database has an executor that runs on compressed data
Otherwise, your CPU costs can be an order of magnitude or more higher than in a
traditional database.
2. How the three approaches of parallelism are used for better performance, and what do you think which one of these three approaches is more suitable? Give reasons to support your ideas.
Better Performance through Parallelism: Three Common Approaches
There are three widely used approaches for parallelizing work over additional hardware:
• shared memory
• shared disk
• shared nothing
Shared memory: In a shared-memory approach, as implemented on many symmetric multi-
processor machines, all of the CPUs share a single memory and a single collection of disks.
This approach is relatively easy to program: complex distributed locking and commit protocol
are not needed, since the lock manager and buffer pool are both stored in the memory system
where they can be easily accessed by all the processors.
Shared disk: Shared-disk systems suffer from similar scalability limitations. In a shared-disk
architecture, there are a number of independent processor nodes, each with its own memory.
These nodes all access a single collection of disks, typically in the form of a storage area
network (SAN) system or a network-attached storage (NAS) system. This architecture
originated with the Digital Equipment Corporation VAXcluster in the early 1980s, and has been
widely used by Sun Microsystems and Hewlett-Packard.
To make shared-disk technology work better, vendors typically implement a "shared-cache"
design. Shared cache works much like shared disk, except that, when a node in a parallel
cluster needs to access a disk page, it:
1) First checks to see if the page is in its local buffer pool ("cache")
2) If not, checks to see if the page is in the cache of any other node in the cluster
3) If not, reads the page from disk
Shared Nothing: In a shared-nothing approach, by contrast, each processor has its own set of
disks. Data is "horizontally partitioned" across nodes, such that each node has a subset of the
rows from each table in the database. Each node is then responsible for processing only the
rows on its own disks. Such architectures are especially well suited to the star schema queries
present in data warehouse workloads, as only a very limited amount of communication
bandwidth is required to join one or more (typically small) dimension tables with the (typically
much larger) fact table.
In addition, every node maintains its own lock table and buffer pool, eliminating the need for
complicated locking and software or hardware consistency mechanisms. Because shared
nothing does not typically have nearly as severe bus or resource contention as shared-memory
or shared-disk machines, shared nothing can be made to scale to hundreds or even thousands
of machines. Because of this, it is generally regarded as the best-scaling architecture [4].
Shared-nothing clusters also can be constructed using very low-cost commodity PCs and
networking hardware – as Google, Amazon, Yahoo, and MSN have all demonstrated. For
example, Google's search clusters reportedly consist of tens of thousands of shared-nothing
nodes, each costing around $700. Such clusters of PCs are frequently termed "grid computers."
In summary, shared nothing dominates shared disk, which in turn dominates shared memory, in
terms of scalability.
On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 6:13 PM, Mohammad Sajjad <ghulamemastan@gmail.com> wrote:
Acha ji mili to send do ga inshaaAllah
On Friday, 20 January 2012, SveeT GrL <princyofheart@gmail.com> wrote:
> muje b chaia cs614 ki solution file plz shareeeeeeee
>
> On 19 January 2012 23:00, Mohammad Sajjad <ghulamemastan@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Mujhay b plz please....
>>
>> On Friday, 20 January 2012, mc 100404894 Saima Haider <mc100404894@vu.edu.pk> wrote:
>> > friends
>> > I need cs614 solution today is extended day please send me any body
>> >
>> > --
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>> >
>>
>> --
>>
>> Regard's
>> Mohammad Sajjad
>> jis dawa kita "main" ala o pal vich ho Iblees(Sheetan) gaya....
>> oonay yar no wakhraya samja c main q samjha je main howan...
>>
>>
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--Regard'sMohammad Sajjadjis dawa kita "main" ala o pal vich ho Iblees(Sheetan) gaya....oonay yar no wakhraya samja c main q samjha je main howan...
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Zindagi mein 2 Logo ka buhat khayal rahkoooo
Ist woh jiss ney tumhari jeet ke Liye buhat kuch hara hoo (Father)
2nd woh jiss ko tum ney har dukh me pukaara hoo (Mother)
2nd woh jiss ko tum ney har dukh me pukaara hoo (Mother)
Regards,
Umair Saulat
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