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I think Vern hit it on the head.  A cursorless SQL SELECT INTO still bags
the overhead of opening/closing the file.  It just must do it faster than
coding our own cursor, (as Joe has determined).

I know we can emulate the following traditional
for x = 1 to number;
  open(e) myfile;
  chain(e) x myfile;
  close(e) myfile;
endfor;

While that test might be more apples to apples it has no application
whatsover in the real world.

Rob Berendt
--
Group Dekko Services, LLC
Dept 01.073
PO Box 2000
Dock 108
6928N 400E
Kendallville, IN 46755
http://www.dekko.com


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|   Vern Hamberg              |                                           |
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|   07/23/2004 03:52 PM       |                                     Techni|
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It depends on what you want to test. I think Mark P. said it well - when
doing regression testing, I guess I'd call it, you want to start from the
same point. In this case, if you are comparing just how each engine works
as a unit or component, you'd probably want to eliminate other variables.
But that's only one kind of test. Another kind is what you ARE doing, which
is repeated runs, to see what happens then. Even here, you might want to
clear the air. When I was testing in the DB lab at IBM, we often had warmup
runs that we excluded from the results, so that we could test, as much as
possible, a steady-state environment.

Then there's the need to do real-world simulations. That's even harder.
Just look at the work the TPC organization does for benchmarks.

Lots of reasons to do things different ways. But in your valid quest for
meaningful information we want also to be sure we minimize random
influences.

In the case of your tests that use SELECT INTO, it may be that the SQL
engine is still doing some open/close activity. It'd be useful to run the
DBMON against your program, to see what is really going on with SQL. This
run would not be useful for performance comparisons, only to gather
information on how it is running. Oh, and, before using DBMON, maybe STRDBG
would give a hint of things. And it is possible with QAQQINI settings to
get even more information in the job log. Most of those settings are
documented and available in InfoCenter and probably somewhere at
<www.iseries.ibm.com/db2>.

Vern

At 03:43 PM 7/23/2004, you wrote:
> > From: Vern Hamberg
> >
> > Joe, it's not really caching, it's just the result of data being in
>memory
> > that is available to all processes. Unit testing would need you to
>CLRPOOL
> > and SETOBJACC *PURGE in order to compare apples to apples. Another
>kind of
> > testing would be what you are doing now, to show what happens when you
> > leave things in memory.
>
>Um, why would I need to CLRPOOL to compare "apples to apples"?  Are you
>saying that somehow CLRPOOL will make SQL run better?  Why?  Does SQL
>not know how to take advantage of memory?  If so, that's a knock on SQL,
>not my testing.  Since I would never be doing a CLRPOOL in production,
>why would I do it in a test?
>
>Just trying to find out what you consider "apples to apples" to really
>mean.
>
>Joe
>
>--
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