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Full Discussion: SUN T5240 vs M3000
Operating Systems Solaris SUN T5240 vs M3000 Post 302431087 by busyboy on Monday 21st of June 2010 02:20:35 AM
Old 06-21-2010
incredible:
thanks for clear-case information. Smilie
 

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1. Solaris

raidctl on SUN T5240

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2. Solaris

Can't PowerOn M3000 - Bad Data CRC

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3. Solaris

Raidctl - Sun T5240 Solaris 10 Problem

I tried using raidctl earlier today to use my 2 disks in a RAID1 setup and I totally destroyed my OS install. I'm sure I did something funky and it freaked out. No big deal...right? This is what I was seeing after a reboot. I decided to just reinstall the OS. It let me go through all of... (3 Replies)
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4. Solaris

XSCF on M3000

Hi, I've updated a few M3000s to new firmware without any hassle, but on one of them the following is happening: XSCF> getflashimage -u wayner ftp://10.16.122.200/tftpboot/IKXCP1102.tar.gz Error: insufficient free space Any idea how to delete whatever old firmware is on there so I can... (7 Replies)
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5. Solaris

Bizarre Sun T5240 behavior

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6. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support

disk replacment, SUN M3000

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7. Solaris

Application running too slow on Sun SPARC T5440 but run normal on sun M3000

Hi all, I have application running on sun server T5440 4x8x1.4 GHz, 64 GB RAM, application running very slow though load average too low. when I install my application on another server SUN M3000 (One CPU 1x8x2.5GHz, 8GB RAM), application run smoothly. Here is my server T5440 info: ... (6 Replies)
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8. Solaris

Poor performance on an M3000

Hi We have an M3000 single physical processor and 8gb of memory running Solaris 10. This system runs two Oracle Databases one on Oracle 9i and One on Oracle 10g. As soon as the Oracle 10g database starts we see an immediate drop in system performance, for example opening an ssh session can... (6 Replies)
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9. Solaris

Using a Modem on a T5-2 or a T5240

Hi Folks, Just a quick question - hopefully! I have an application currently running on a V890 with Solaris 9, I'd like to move this to either one of our T-5's or one of the T5240's in a Legacy container on an LDOM - but the fly in the ointment is the application still uses a standard Hayes... (3 Replies)
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PREPARE(7)							   SQL Commands 							PREPARE(7)

NAME
PREPARE - create a prepared query SYNOPSIS
PREPARE plan_name [ (datatype [, ...] ) ] AS query INPUTS plan_name An arbitrary name given to this particular prepared query. It must be unique within a single session, and is used to execute or remove a previously prepared query. datatype The data-type of a parameter to the prepared query. To refer to the parameters in the prepared query itself, use $1, $2, etc. OUTPUTS PREPARE The query has been prepared successfully. DESCRIPTION
PREPARE creates a prepared query. A prepared query is a server-side object that can be used to optimize performance. When the PREPARE statement is executed, the specified query is parsed, rewritten, and planned. When a subsequent EXECUTE statement is issued, the prepared query need only be executed. Thus, the parsing, rewriting, and planning stages are only performed once, instead of every time the query is executed. Prepared queries can take parameters: values that are substituted into the query when it is executed. To specify the parameters to a pre- pared query, include a list of data-types with the PREPARE statement. In the query itself, you can refer to the parameters by position using $1, $2, etc. When executing the query, specify the actual values for these parameters in the EXECUTE statement -- refer to EXECUTE [execute(7)] for more information. Prepared queries are stored locally (in the current backend), and only exist for the duration of the current database session. When the client exits, the prepared query is forgotten, and so it must be re-created before being used again. This also means that a single prepared query cannot be used by multiple simultaneous database clients; however, each client can create their own prepared query to use. Prepared queries have the largest performance advantage when a single backend is being used to execute a large number of similar queries. The performance difference will be particularly significant if the queries are complex to plan or rewrite. For example, if the query involves a join of many tables or requires the application of several rules. If the query is relatively simple to plan and rewrite but rel- atively expensive to execute, the performance advantage of prepared queries will be less noticeable. NOTES In some situations, the query plan produced by PostgreSQL for a prepared query may be inferior to the plan produced if the query were sub- mitted and executed normally. This is because when the query is planned (and the optimizer attempts to determine the optimal query plan), the actual values of any parameters specified in the query are unavailable. PostgreSQL collects statistics on the distribution of data in the table, and can use constant values in a query to make guesses about the likely result of executing the query. Since this data is unavailable when planning prepared queries with parameters, the chosen plan may be sub-optimal. For more information on query planning and the statistics collected by PostgreSQL for query optimization purposes, see the ANALYZE [ana- lyze(7)] documentation. COMPATIBILITY
SQL92 SQL92 includes a PREPARE statement, but it is only for use in embedded SQL clients. The PREPARE statement implemented by PostgreSQL also uses a somewhat different syntax. SQL - Language Statements 2002-11-22 PREPARE(7)
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