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Sybase database runs entirely in-memory

Sybase database runs entirely in-memory

By:  Joab Jackson  On: 27 Jan 2010 For: InfoWorld (U.S.) 

New version 15.5 of Sybase's flagship database can now run entirely within memory. The move puts Sybase among other vendors offering the same capability like Oracle and IBM

The new version of Sybase's flagship database system software, released Wednesday, will be the first version that can be run entirely within working memory.

 

Version 15.5 of the Sybase ASE (Adaptive Server Enterprise) has an option to run in-memory databases, said Peter Thawley, a Sybase senior director and architect.

 

Sybase joins other database vendors in offering in-memory capability. Oracle also offers an in-memory database, Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database 11G, from a company it acquired in 2005. IBM also started offering this capability in 2008, with its solidDB, also the result of a company acquisition.

 

The in-memory approach involves placing the entire database within a server's working memory, rather than storing it on disk. This cuts the time it takes to write data to, or read data from, the disk, which typically can take two to four milliseconds. An in-memory write or read can take less than a millisecond. (The changes can then later be committed to disk, or not, as per the administrator's preference).

 

Today's largest transactional systems, such as those found in the financial community, can do as many as 300,000 to 400,000 transactions per second, and that number is expected to balloon to over a million per second in the years to come, Thawley said. In many cases, the database disk writes and reads are the performance bottlenecks to such systems.

 

In-memory databases can also be used by government and corporate intelligence organizations, to quickly analyze terabytes of information.

 

In beta tests running an in-memory ASE database, customers experienced performance gains of three to four times the speed of their regular databases, Thawley claimed.

 

Sybase executives state that their in-memory technology is superior to other approaches insofar that running a Sybase in-memory database does not require unique API (application programming interface) on behalf of the applications that will be using that database. Most in-memory databases require a specialized calls, where ASE can be accessed through the standard T-SQL (Transact-SQL) language used to access ASE database, Thawley noted.


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joab jackson Joab Jackson is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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