Oracle today announced a record-breaking 8 processor TPC-H 300 GB data warehousing benchmark result for Oracle Database 10g and Oracle Real Application Clusters on Linux, showing yet again Oracle’s ability to manage data warehouses on low-cost clustered Linux servers.
Running on a two-node Dell PowerEdge 6600 server cluster, each with four Intel Xeon 3.0 GHz processors with the Red Hat Enterprise Linux AS 3.0 operating system, Oracle Database 10g with Real Application Clusters achieved record performance for 8 processor systems, of 6.795.5QphH@300GB with a price-performance ratio of $42/QphH@300GB. This record result outperforms the previous best 8 processor TPC-H 300 GB result from IBM DB2, delivering four percent more performance at 36 percent less cost. This result also outperforms the next best 8 processor TPC-H 300 GB result from Microsoft SQL Server by 67 percent and costs less.
“We’ve demonstrated again how Oracle Database 10g with Real Application Clusters and standardized systems on Linux deliver world-class performance and scalability for the enterprise,” said Richard Sarwal, vice president of Server Performance, Oracle Corp. “The Oracle-Linux combination is an attractive solution for organizations looking to lower total cost-of-ownership while at the same time achieving world-class performance.”
This benchmark adds to the extensive list of Oracle Database 10g performance world records, including world record TPC-H benchmarks in the one and three terabyte scale factor categories, and the overall TPC-C world record result of 1.18 million transactions per minute on clustered Linux servers. As the leading database for production data warehousing, Oracle Database 10g provides a single, integrated database engine for scalable and high performing data warehousing implementations. This new record-breaking benchmark illustrates why customers choose Oracle to run very large databases.
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