Tim,
If you leave off the "Hi Mike" we are at 244 words.  I can live with
that.  
This is exactly what I was looking for.  And given that you are
reasonably impartial to the testing parameters (i.e. I did not ask you
to compare DB2 to MySQL) I grant you full credibility in your statements
:-)
Thank you for the honest feedback as it sounds like 64-bit is certainly
the way to go!  But, as always YMMV!
Woohoo!
Regards,
Mike
mike.p@xxxxxxxx   Cell: (408)679-1011    Office: (815)722-3454
Zend Server for IBM i Beta avilable at
http://www.zend.com/en/products/server/zend-server-5-new-ibmi 
-----Original Message-----
From: web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Timothy P Clark
Sent: Monday, January 04, 2010 2:26 PM
To: web400@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [WEB400] MySQL IBMDB2I Storage Engine - Where
isha_ibmdb2i.soplugin ?
Hi Mike,
For the most reliable answer, you'll want to check with the PASE guys, 
since it really comes down to details of the PASE runtime. Here's my
take, 
though.
The 32-bit build has a smaller memory footprint and may therefore give 
better performance on a system where main-store is constrained. Prior to
IBM i 6.1, there was an additional performance advantage provided by 
32-bit apps; but my understanding is that in 6.1 and later, 64-bit has 
caught up to 32-bit. The primary advantage of a 64-bit binary is that
the 
virtually unlimited address space means that much larger data sets can
be 
used.
Theoretically, then, for most shops with small or medium-sized data sets
and a reasonable number of concurrent users, there shouldn't be much 
practical difference between the 32-bit and 64-bit builds. However! As
it 
so happens, I was doing some performance comparisons on 32-bit vs 64-bit
builds of MySQL several weeks ago (5.1.41, I believe). My own very
limited 
and *very informal* testing indicated that (all else being equal) the 
64-bit build ran measurably faster than the 32-bit build. This was a 
surprise to me. I don't know if MySQL uses different optimization
settings 
for the different builds or why this would be the case. I would suggest 
that users concerned about performance download both binaries and do
some 
basic comparisons themselves. Since multiple servers can be installed 
side-by-side and can point to the same data set, this is relatively easy
to do.
Did you say 50 words or 500 words...?
Tim
Tim,
Thank you for the follow up.
I am curious if there is a significant difference in performance,
power,
function of the 64-bit version over the 32-bit version. My gut would
say yes but my head is saying "why should I care unless I am using a
lot
of data and more memory addresses, etc." Might there be a small
advantage in running the 32-bit for smaller installations with less
data
requirements, etc.
In 50 words or less please :-)
Regards,
Mike
mike.p@xxxxxxxx Cell: (408)679-1011 Office: (815)722-3454
Zend Server for IBM i Beta avilable at
http://www.zend.com/en/products/server/zend-server-5-new-ibmi
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