Can .NET Really Scale?
swordfish asks: "Does anyone have first hand experience with scaling .NET to support 100+ concurrent requests on a decent 2-4 CPU box with web services? I'm not talking a cluster of 10 dual CPU systems, but a single system. the obvious answer is 'buy more systems', but what if your customer says I only have 20K budgeted for the year. No matter what Slashdot readers say about buying more boxes, try telling that to your client, who can't afford anything more. I'm sure some of you will think, 'what are you smoking?' But the reality of current economics means 50K on a server for small companies is a huge investment. One could argue 5 cheap systems for 3K each could support that kind of load, but I haven't seen it, so inquiring minds want to know!"
"Ok, I've heard from different people as to whether or not .NET scales well and I've been working with it for the last 7 months. So far from what I can tell it's very tough to scale for a couple of different reasons.
- currently there isn't a mature messaging server and MSMQ is not appropriate for high load messaging platform.
- SOAP is too damn heavy weight to scale well beyond 60 concurrent requests for a single CPU 3ghz system.
- SQL Server doesn't support C# triggers or a way to embed C# applications within the database
- The through put of SQL Server is still around 200 concurrent requests for a single or dual CPU box. I've read the posts about Transaction Processing Council, but get real, who can afford to spend 6 million on a 64 CPU box?
- the clients we target are small-ish, so they can't spend more than 30-50K on a server. so where does that leave you in terms of scalability
- I've been been running benchmarks with dynamic code that does quite a bit of reflection and the performance doesn't impress me.
- I've also compared the performance of a static ASP/HTML page to webservice page and the throughput goes from 150-200 to about 10-20 on a 2.4-2.6Ghz system
- to get good through put with SQL Server you have to use async calls, but what if you have to do sync calls? From what I've seen the performance isn't great (it's ok) and I don't like the idea of setting up partitions. Sure, you can put mirrored raid on all the DB servers, but that doesn't help me if a partition goes down and the data is no longer available.
- I asked a MS SQL Server DBA about real-time replication across multiple servers and his remark was "it doesn't work, don't use it."
... but Unix/Java programmers aren't. Wanting to write the code for free, too?
Apache, FreeBSD and a cluster of 10 or so $1k servers and a nice DB server running PostgreSQL.
Works for me.
I hate to say it, I've been too long out of the MS development world. That kind of overhead managed to amaze me.
I'm deploying systems right now (some buzzword compliant, some (more efficient ones) on lowly little open source, that scale to an order of magnitude higher transaction volume at a fraction of the cost. No, none of them are windows.
No wonder my company has been doing well in a downturn. (Oh, sorry, we're "recovering" now.)
I forget what 8 was for.
It's a damn simple question: can .NET really scale?
.NET, I advise you to keep your mouth shut. The signal/noise ratio is bad enough already.
Why on earth did you bring open source into it? If the man wanted to know about Linux & BSD, he would've asked.
If you don't have any experience with the scalability of
My first inclination is to recommend throwing that $20k at an ASP that can provide the server infrastructure to give you support for 100 concurrent connections.
Barring that, my recommendation would be to split the web front end and database, spending about $10k on each (using dell or hpq). I can almost gaurantee that you aren't going to get 100 concurrent connections for less that $80k to $100k without doing some sort of load distribution. If you strip down the amount of dynamic content and say script a refresh of a static page, you might be able to do it, but we don't really know what the app is going to be doing.
Jerry
A) This consultant, it sounds like, is largely or exclusively MS. He's not going to suggest Open Source software to his client because that will mean a loss in business. You can hardly blame him; you gotta go with what you know.
B) Oftentimes a commercial solution to some problems exists where a free one does not. The cost of development and maintanance means that the balance is not strictly in terms of free and non-free; after all, your developers' time costs quite a bit as well and home-grown or open source solutions may need more time taken in administration.
This is a pretty complex issue; different analyses have been done with different results. I myself am partial to Open Source, but this does not mean that the obvious answer is, "Hey, go Open Source! It's free!" Get real.
Right. Small businesses want to stay small, and sending all their money to Redmond is one way of doing that!
First, you didn't really specify anything except in generalities, but there's a few things that pop out from my experiences:
1. Why are you wed to C#, especially in regards to triggers? How many tiers exist, and are you pumping a lot of data back-and-forth.
2. Your scaling numbers are low already, especially under ASP and static HTML.
3. You never really define concurrent requests. For some people, it means simultaneous requests, and for others, it means simultaneous transactions. But you really are looking at fairly low numbers there, in either case.
4. Scaling this should involve looking at where you choke. One common choke point that keeps killing people is in open database connections. Are you running a pool? How large? How many connections does a page take? The single most common problem I've seen in scaling is poorly implemented connection pooling, thereby causing a ton of stuff to wait. Check this, check, then check again.
5. Sync versus Async shouldn't really be coming into play yet on the db.
6. When designing for light-weight systems, you want to minimize the tiers, and minimize the data passed back and forth. Just by reading this, I'm worried that you created a very elegant, but impractical, system that isn't suited to the hardware limitations.
No matter what OS you run you do need people to keep tabs on it. Most users are very stupid [re: running all email attachments] and are prone to damaging computer systems.
...
.NET ASP super programs. oh yeah
Even if they were using Linux they would need someone around to make sure everything runs smoothly.
The trick is to multi-task. Once the system is running, a small business sysadmin is not a full time job. They can also program or PR or
Also the benefit of not using MSFT tools is the weaker propagation of acronymedics. E.g. I can code DOM SOAP
10 print 'hello world'
L33t!
Tom
Someday, I'll have a real sig.
This entire story is lacking units.. I am so confused, it is like this...
"I bought a 400 car from my dealer, who said it could go 0-1200 in 57, but I talked to an auto mechanic and he said that the rpm throttled at 4.5 billion, so I don't know if I should get a turbo charger which would at least boost the speed to 1295!!"
If you are talking about 100 concurrent request per second: Any DB worth its salt should handle that IFF the database queries aren't too complex. If they are, your schemas suck. This is doubly true on a 3 GHz machine.
Windows is only one burnt CD, redhat is like 3. thus, linux costs more!
2. SOAP is too damn heavy weight to scale well beyond 60 concurrent requests for a single CPU 3ghz system.
.NET specifically, but just SOAP in general. Make sure you separate out the platform from the product. Saying web services with SOAP won't work is a long way away from saying .NET doesn't scale.
.NET languages, but that's rarely going to be a way to make your system run faster and scale more. Plus, I'm confused - what's your alternative? What database are you going to recommend that allows you to embed C# (C++, whatever) programs in the database itself?
.NET question, it's an SQL question.
.NET, or just a particular product. You might go with .NET and not use MS SQL Server, for that matter.
It doesn't sound like you're talking about
3. SQL Server doesn't support C# triggers or a way to embed C# applications within the database
Embedding applications in the database violates basic scaling principals: you need to separate out into n-tier, right? You don't want the database server doing anything but serving databases. Now, having said that, Yukon (the next version of MS SQL) will indeed let you do certain things in the database with
9. I asked a MS SQL Server DBA about real-time replication across multiple servers and his remark was "it doesn't work, don't use it."
Sounds like it's time to get a more informed consultant who can demonstrate failure or success beyond a throwaway line. I'm not saying replication does or doesn't work, but you can't base your enterprise plans on a single line from a single guy - let alone strangers like me on Slashdot. Furthermore, this isn't a
It's easy to make big decisions if you break them up into a series of smaller ones. Look at each of your questions and decide if it pertains to
What's your damage, Heather?
People in SMALL business do not want a system which requires them to hire someone to constantly keep tabs on it.
What?#$#@ I don't care who this "SMALL" business may be, but if you put a server on the internet, and plan on not having someone to "keep tabs on it", please, get off of the f-ing internet. It's that type of mentality that yields the servers out there that STILL are spreading Code Red and Nimbda, because nobody has kept tabs on these infected servers in years.
Hello, .NET Portal Application for the past few months. I ran a quick Test on our application just to see how it would run.
.NET platform can handle about 100 Requests per second before it starts to get hot.
I have been Developing a
Specs Are as Follows:
App Server:
Duron 800
512 MB RAM
40GB HD 7200RPM
DB Server:
Celeron 500
640 MB RAM
20GB HD 7200RPM
As you can see, these are not server class machines, but they seem to run the app alright. I ran a simulation of this application based on the IBS Portal www.asp.net running 150 Concurrent Requests Per Second:
The average Requests per second on this app were 98.51. So, IMHO on low quaility hardware, the
You're bound to get lots of responses of how to scale the system up. I'll focus on scaling the requirements down.
Unless the transactions are really long, "100+ concurrent requests" as a sustained rate is a lot of activity for a small business. So, that begs questions:
-- What percentage of these Web service requests are read-only "query" style, and can you use application-aware caching to return results out of RAM instead of having to hit disk for each one?
-- What is the client to this application, and can there be ways to help induce a smoother load from them (e.g., discount rates if the application is used in off hours or on weekends)? Or is the 100+ concurrent requests going on 24x7?
-- Do all the requests have to be filled by the server, or can you blend in some P2P concepts so the clients can absorb some of the load?
-- Can you increase the amount of data handled per transaction (perhaps by switching to document-style SOAP or REST instead of RPC-style SOAP) and thereby reduce the number of requests and excessive message parsing and marshalling?
There's probably a bunch other things to do as well, but those came to mind off the top of my head.
The Busy Coder's Guide to Android Development
If this guy is a consultant, sometimes clients have specifications for what type of hardware/software is used. Especially if their own IT group will be maintaining the systems.
"Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"
- Charles Darwin
1, Buy *a lot* of memory for the box
.NET is the same but different - they both require a hefty amount of ram to operate at best performance (and atleast java just gets better the more memory that is available on the server ;)
.net remoting implementation instead - you can probably find a few with a quick google search (IIOP comes to mind, good way to make future interfacing with other technologies available just a easy as with webservices/soap and gaining better performance in the bargain).
2, Cache as much as you can of the dynamic content
3, try to stay away from bloated protocols
1: Java,
2: Maybe doesn't help much with scalability, performance will go up though - and maybe you might get good enough scalability too. Database access is always slower than a hashmap lookup (if said hashmap can stay in ram ofcourse)
3: Web-services etc etc are maybe good in theory but at the moment those technologies are a duck in a pond when it comes to scalability and performance. Use a highperformance
Also investigate how much you can make your site use asynchronous notifications, more is better - even if ms messaging client is too bad, you can write your own asynchronous "protocol".
Example configuration is a Windows 2000 box with dual Xeons and 2GB of RAM
I wrote and administer a J2EE application that supports online rebate offers for a very large company. We have over 350,000 registered users and typically 500 simultaneous sessions on a dual 1 GHz PIII Linux box with MS SQL Server on a similar dual CPU W2K box for the database.
Whatever you are doing with your application (probably misapplication of EJB) is wrong.
In other words, it's not what you're using to do it, it's how you're doing it. If you're just pumping out files to clients on modems, 100+ concurrent requests isn't much. If those requests are all CPU-bound, I hope they're all niced or set to a low priority, otherwise you won't be able to log into the machine in a reasonable amount of time. If it's 100+ concurrent connections, but those connections aren't necessarily waiting for a response (just idle until the user does something) then you might not even care.
How many whatevers you have must always be qualified by knowledge of what those whatevers are doing. Otherwise your whatevers won't fit in your $20k thingamajig. And then Mr. Bigglesworth gets upset.
Of course, whether .NET is a properly-implemented system is a separate debate...
We have switched from Windows Svr 2k and ASP to Apache 2 and PHP 4 on the front end. On the back end we use java 1.4 and broke our application apart to run multiple master/slave processes in a tree system (Process A, Master I, Machines a-d. Process B, Master II, Machines e-h...) to do data analysis for the requests. (This is a data mining sort of thing with analysis and a search). The DB starting becoming a bottleneck after we got up to 200 concurrent processes, which we fixed by breaking apart the DB and placing half on another server and running 2 simultaneous DB connects per slave process and this could continue for some time i'm thinking.
If that gets too goofy we may end up partitioning the requests in the beginning and mirroring two seperated complete systems, but we're not really envisioning it ever getting that big.
Of course, most of the problem is simply the back end keeping up because the front ends don't do much at all except call the java app and return the data it gets...
Argh, I hate to give up moderation rights but I have to chime in here.
A small business CANNOT afford to employ a full time UNIX administrator. Open source solutions just do not have the ease of administration of the Windows GUIs. Until they do, they will not be small business friendly. Windows Small Business Server provides you with one installer that will basically set you up completely (Exchange Server and all).
Now, before you flame me out for being pro-Microsoft, you should know that almost all my machines at home run Gentoo Linux, and I prefer to use Linux myself.
I had a long discussion with a good friend who is not terribly computer literate. Linux drives him _crazy_ because he can't just, "point, click and go" as he said it. Until these issues are resolved, we won't see small organizations without dedicated IT staff rolling out Linux installs.
I got to tell you its probably not java more the actual application server and/or the application. We use ATG Dynamo, and for that we get what we pay for: More than 4000 concurrent users ( active sessions ) per Dynamo instance with out any problems). Although with Version 6, they've decided to go all J2EE Buzzword compliant and complicated the entire setup.
Anyway. If you can't support 100 requests a second on 50k of modern hardware, you have huge design issues and other problems. Just from your short description of the project, I fear you have crawled into over-engineered land because alot of the technologies are much more useful on seperate boxes/distributed enviroments.
Good Luck. Remember that C# Web apps can be multi-threaded, and remember to optimize the parts of your application that MATTER. A wise man once said "Premature optimization is the root of all evil". Find the slow parts, fix them, get the most bang for buck. Also, remember to keep those pieces loosely-bound to each other, no C# code in the DB!
--MetaCosm
P.S. I hope you haven't over-engineered this tool as badly as it sounds like you have
"I asked a MS SQL Server DBA about real-time replication across multiple servers and his remark was "it doesn't work, don't use it."
We are running transactional replication on several large databases (6-14 GB) on a Media Metrix top 50 website with no problems. It needs to be set correctly (batch size, timeouts, etc) but it does work quite nicely. The DB machine is heavy hardware, but it it able to keep up with 12-15 front end webservers, all with applications hitting the DB.
I find it funny to watch the war between the "why are you suggesting open source crowd" and the "open source is the only way". I have built IIS/ASP/SQL server solutions and I have built Apache/PHP/PostgreSQL solutions. There is a place and time for both solutions.
.NET so far due to the heavy memory footprint it places on a system. Yes, VB.NET is faster than VBScript, but if you were using compiled COM objects in the first place, .NET costs more memory for a slower system. (I do think that .NET's ability to do in place object updates rocks, but I hope you have a devolpment server for bouncing and PLAN your updates...)
As an aside, I have to say that I have avoided
But more to the point, your customers don't seem to have the budget to succeed in any domain. If you can't afford more than 20K for a machine and licenses, surely you can't afford to pay the programmers an adequate salary either. So does that mean open source? Heck no... you still have to pay the programmers! I don't think I have *ever* seen a project where the programmers were *cheaper* than the hardware.
Sig under construction since 1998.
I am the network admin at a large .Net website (5+ million unique visitors each month) and we often handle hundreds of tens of simultaneous requests. The entire site runs on 6 webservers and two database servers that run at less than 50% capacity during peak times.
If you can't scale above 100 connections on a 3GHz system then you are doing something wrong. Check your code, check your databases.
Your question is about as useful as "I have a piece of string that is not long enough, what can I use instead that is longer?"
And since he's talking about web services I would think he would be providing a web administration interface. If something breaks on the backend it's going to take a consultant to fix things whether it's Windows or UNIX.
I agree with the one poster that if this guy has low budget clients then he needs to be reducing costs in software so he can spec better hardware. If that software is open source then he needs to start learning open source stuff or find richer clients.
The meme police, They live inside of my head
A small business CANNOT afford to employ a full time UNIX administrator.
They can't affor NOT to: We service many small compaines who use Windows desktops connected to UNIX (OpenBSD firewalls, FreeBSD servers). The savings in time alone are staggering:
Real example:
One office of ten accountants has been managed by me lasst year for under $3000.
They have offsite backups, a PostgreSQL databe, Samba file serving, 56K nat, Firewall, email filtering.
If (and its a BIG if) one of the servers has a problem - I can remotly fix it over my cell phone connection, and I don't have to charge them travel time. If it was Windows - I'd have to drive there.
Windows is expensive because it requires full time baby-sitting. UNIX, once deployes is usuall fire and forget.
Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.
Hi!
Executive summary:
Yes.
Boring details: .Net (mostly C#, some components in VB), including Windows forms and ASP.Net web pages. (Why both? The project incorporates multiple applications for different kinds of users.) As part of pre-shipment testing we're in the midst of extensive testing, including load testing.
I'm goofing off, perusing SlashDot at the end of a dinner break. We're shipping a big project to a customer on Monday--the project is written in
The Windows applications communicate with the data tier using SOAP/XML, using synchronous messaging. Practically every message involves a database transaction with SQL Server 2000. Across a range of loads we are seeing round-trip message responses (from receipt of the inbound XML message to return from the web service) averaging less than 90 ms per message. That 90 ms average can be misleading--some of our messages involve extensive processing and/or lots of data. Some of the transaction work we're doing with SVG images involve SOAP messages with payloads greater than 1 MB, so the average gets dragged out.
Based on our testing, we anticipate supporting hundreds of simultaneous users--in a near-real-time environment--from a single web service. As we scale out on larger projects we may need to scale the number of web servers (although IIS on Windows 2003 is supposed to be substantially faster--YMMV), but we won't need to scale the database. Using a similar messaging architecture for a different client I have a project supporting 400+ users on a single SQL Server.
This is SlashDot, after all... .Net. And recommending it. But you asked, so I'll answer: .Net is scaleable in terms of the final application, and .Net is scaleable in terms of the size of the development team that is involved. This project involves 19 developers (a total of 60+ individual projects in the nightly build) and we're able to manage the entire thing remarkably well. Developing web service applications with .Net is remarkably easy to do; developing sockets apps is unbelievably simpler than using WinInet.dll. And the web developers are extremely happy working in ASP.Net--I don't know where you heard that ASP.Net is slower than ASP, but that's simply not true. ASP.Net is significantly faster.
Obviously you're going to get a lot of "why not use...?" posts, and I'm sure I'll get flamed for having the temerity to admit to using
With regard to other comments .Net Remoting. Quick to prototype, barks in production. Like OLE, it's a great way to make a Pentium 4 box emulate an original 8086 IBM PC. (Far smarter to manage communication with XML-based messaging. It just takes more coding.)
I'm the data/messaging architect on the project: I can speak to the comments about messaging, reflection, and SQL Server. As with any Microsoft-based development project, you have to think carefully, and think critically, about how to design your application. Microsoft will always give you a quick! easy! fun! way to rapidly produce a prototype. You have to dig deeper, and think harder, to produce a scaleable application. The quick! easy! fun! technology du jour is
That SQL Server doesn't permit triggers to be written in C#--so? Transact-SQL is suitable for database development. We could ask for more (such as integrating stored procedures and other database code into Visual SourceSafe). There is talk that the next version of SQL Server will permit coding in .Net languages--that'd be cool, but I'll wait and see.
The single most compelling argument for .Net .Net Framework. You might look into this particularly for clients that are choking on server pricing--but you might also pay careful attention, because a robust Mono project will encourage/force Microsoft to compete on features and functionality, instead of a take-what-we-give-you mentality. That's a Very Good Thing.
Mono--an Open Source implementation of the
scalable? .NET? This is a troll, right?
-I like my women like I like my tea: green-
A common misconception is that anybody can administer an MS server, but the truth is that it's not a whole lot easier to do than administer a Unix box. What's scary is that it looks easier and most IT managers think it's easier. That's why most Windows admins are grossly incompetent, especially when it comes to security.
A good Windows admin costs the same as a good Unix admin.
The global economy is a great thing until you feel it locally.
I had a long discussion with a good friend who is not terribly computer literate. Linux drives him _crazy_ because he can't just, "point, click and go" as he said it.
Windows systems need an administrator every bit as clueful as a UNIX sysadmin if they are to have any reliability at all. If the Windows 'sysadmin' has to be able to point-click-go to be able to function, in all probability the Windows system will be unreliable and insecure.
It is a false economy to think that "It's Windows. I can hire a junior reboot monkey to admin the system" - a Windows system really does require a sysadmin every bit as competent, skilled and clueful as a Unix system. A Windows system can be very reliable with a clueful admin - but it *needs* a clueful admin. Companies are shooting themselves in the foot if they think otherwise.
Oolite: Elite-like game. For Mac, Linux and Windows
There are actually lots of reasons. Not to say that in all cases you *should* go with a big server instead of a bunch of little weeny-boxen... but the point is that "bigger server" doesn't equal "bad". Here's a few reasons:
For one, there's reliability:
-first of all, the more expensive systems have more internal redundancy, which is a good thing (sucks to hamstring even a cheap $1000 machine because the $5 cpu-fan dies, let alone a $3000 middle-of-the line machine because a $50 power-supply dies... or the $5 fan inside the $50 power-supply).
-if p(c) is the probability of a cheap machine crashing, and p(e) is the probability of a single expensive machine (your entire system) crashing, and you require all N of your cheap computers to be running in order to consitute an "up" system... then your overall system crash probability (p*) is:
p*(c) = 1-(1-p(c))^N
vs.
p*(e) = p(e)
so, by buying more, cheaper servers, you're increasing your crash-likelihood, by both increasing p(c) and increasing N (unless you buy additional cheap servers to failover to... but then you have to manage and support failover which is additional $$$ as well in terms of buying/developing/implementing more advanced systems and taking on a higher administration overhead).
Not all systems are distributable, and those that are are often more complicated and/or expensive (but not always).
There's also administration cost:
-Obviously its easier to manage one box than 10 (or easier to manage 5 boxes than a hundred). Not to say that there aren't nice tools for mass-administration... but it is still more work, and anyone who says different is selling something (and something you want to think twice about before buying).
There's ancillary costs:
-hey! if you have ten boxes talking to each other to comprise one "system", then you need a network connecting them! That's another fast switch... and again, because you don't want to lose an expensive "system" because of a failure of one cheap part, you need to buy an expensive switch.
-power costs money, believe it or not.
-so does rack-space.
-so do IPs... unless you're gonna NAT your little cluster, in which case you need to set up a NATing router for them... and that's another single point of failure unless you wanna shell out $$$ of one form another (again: buy/develop/implement).
-you're probably gonna need some sort of KVM switch.
I could go on, but I don't want to. Anyway, the point is that it is more complicated than many of the lot in this particular audience are likely to make out. It is often still the best route (and increasingly so!), but you can't just say that the answer is *always* to buy more, cheaper machines. There are many things to consider.
:Wq
Not an editor command: Wq
Actually, we supply a lot of small businesses in our area with whatever tech support they need. Kind of an outsourced IT staff. Paying us to fix things is as cheap as paying an MSCE monkey to spend 8 hours to fix a 5 minute job. We support OSS, so they save on licensing too. We even have a software team to make custom software, then release it open source.
.Net train before you can see where the tracks are going, then you go ahead. As for me, I plan to use as much cross-platform programming (mostly Java because the GUI is the same everywhere) and free/open source software that I possibly can, mostly because the products I use like JBoss (Free J2EE), Samba, MySQL/PostgreSQL/SAP/Firebird, etc. are more stable than .Net, Windows, MSSQL, etc.
The point is, they should be looking for the right service. You don't need dedicated staff with open source software. We get a call maybe once a month about an OSS product gone bad (usually something silly that can be fixed in 5 minutes if you know what you are doing), and we ssh in and fix it. We get calls about MS products and idiots that don't turn on things before they want to use them from 8AM till close every day. I'm pretty sure that most of our clients have spent more money on MS related tech support than OSS related tech support. I can calculate right now that the TCO for a pirated MS product would still be greater than a OS product by a significant factor. The speed at which MS products have to be fixed/patched is very much greater than a properly configured Linux system, and you're paying for that hell to boot.
If you want to shoot yourself in the foot by jumping on the
Before those of you that say the SQL Server is actually good start flaming me, that's where a lot of headaches come from. SQL Server drops records and corrupts more than MySQL before transaction support. (There, now I'll get flames from both ends.) Also consider the price you are paying. (Per connection last time I checked.) Spend more money on the hardware and get RAID-1 on good disks and a good UPS, and you will have a faster, more reliable RDBMS.
Karma Clown
telling those companies they don't just have to buy
TANSTAAFL.
No matter what you'll have to layout cash to buy the three essential ingredients:
Microsoft marketing would have you believe that their software solves all your problems and that lots of cheaply available people can do the job. They'll still charge you for their software and you'll find out that hardware still costs something and that getting good people to support and maintain your software and hardware is more expensive, but worth it.
Linux advocates will tell you that the software costs zero and that any competent sysadmin can do the job. You'll find out you still have to buy reasonable hardware. And you'll find out that getting good poeple to maintain and support your hw and sw costs more, but is worth it.
Any way you go you're gonna pay.
"Provided by the management for your protection."
Sorry, I've got to go with the poster who says "If you don't have time to take care of your box, get the fuck off the Internet." I run a Linux/Apache site and my logs are full of requests for "default.ida?XXXXXXX..." and other viruses that came out (and were fixed) *years* ago. With UNIX, you pay a bit more in the beginning and then you hardly need to touch the box. Anything that needs to be done, a competent admin can do with nothing more than SSH. As opposed to MS boxes that just sit around, get owned, and fuck up everything. Sorry, but you can not have security and ease of use and low cost and easy to use all at once. Security is *not* fire-and-forget. Security is ongoing *work*. Work: not fun and not easy. You can't have your cake and eat it too. learn your way around, or pay an admin. Otherwise, someday you'll get owned and you'll become one more idiot contributing requests for 'default.ida' and 'root.exe' to my Apache logs.
And I'm sick of this attitude that always seems to come from SB owners, like they are *owed* something and *exempt* from working just because they're a small business. What would we do if they said "I don't have the time or money to learn the rules of the road or how to care for an automobile, I just want to blast down the road at 130 mph, trailing a could of oily smoke, because I'm a SMALL BUSINESS OWNER and I'm in a hurry, dammit!" Would we allow that kind of behavior? HELL NO. I'm sorry, it costs time and money. ACCEPT IT.
Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
"If one of the servers has a problem - I can remotly fix it over my cell phone connection, and I don't have to charge them travel time. If it was Windows - I'd have to drive there."
What?! You've never heard of any of the following:
-- Terminal Services
-- VNC for Windows
-- Remote Desktop commercial programs
I am sorry, but that is just on crack (and so is whoever modded you "Insightful".) In fact, with Terminal Services and the rdesktop client program, you can even administer a Windows desktop or server from a Linux or Mac box. Yes, you can do remote reboots, remote software patches, remote software upgrades, and pretty much everything else.
There are lots of valid reasons for using Linux/BSD/UNIX, but being ignorant about Windows certainly doesn't help your case.
Simpli - Your source for San Jose dedicated servers and colocation!
Furthermore, and I don't know much about .NET, he was also looking for an SQL
backend. You mention "Linux, apache, PHP, whatever" and "some servlet engine, jsp,
etc" without seeming to really understand a couple of crucial points: the "Java one"
would still need an OS and webserver, and all three still need a database server.
Really fancy, high-volume DB servers such as Oracle cost a lot. So then we end up
comparing, say, MySQL, MSSQL, mSQL, and PostgreSQL? Or Perl, PHP, ASP, and
JSP/servelets? I'm sure I'll get flamed by zealots, but those aren't always easy
comparisons.
Write it off as ignorance if you like. It doesn't sound like you're a professional in this field. But so what if he is ignorant? That was my point; if he is best with MS, it's not going to be profitable for him or his client for him to be mucking about with Unix instead.
As for the amount of money you'd save, well, I already commented on that. Sometimes the figures aren't necessarily what they may appear to be; the initial layout is certainly greater with commercialware, but support, time spent on maintainance and deployment, and so forth, is sometimes a lot less.
Install an SSH server on Windows and you'll have much of the same functionality as UNIX through the command line.
" With UNIX I'm in Ireland (I'm usually based in the US) and I get a call 'We just got a new user, could you add them'. I whip out my Ericcson 68i and Sharp Zaurus - and ssh into the server and run a script to add the user."
Did you even bother to check out whether this was possible in Windows? I guess not: this site shows you how to add a user from the command line in Windows. In fact, you could even write a script to do that (batch files... remember those?) In fact, here are lots of handy other things you can do from the command line in Windows, including changing user passwords, forcing users to log off, and more.
Once again, ignorance of what Windows can do is no excuse. I administer 16 Linux boxes... I'm not anti-Linux by any stretch of the imagination, and I know that there are lots of situations where Linux is the better choice. But that still doesn't mean I'm ignorant about what Windows can and can't do.
Simpli - Your source for San Jose dedicated servers and colocation!
A guy down the hall from me was in charge of taking customer web apps written in V6 technologies (vb, asp, etc) and porting them in several ways to .net. They did extensive scalability testing on these apps. They measured requests/sec vs # of cpus, etc etc, to see how asp.net utilized multiproc machines.
.net might run for database driven web apps, of an arbitrary size. Infact, much of it is designed for _exactly_ that.
:) Look at the I/O per sec rate to your tempdb disks and primary LDF disk(s). It is seriously to your advantage to go with an individual spindle for each role, because IO rate is what is so critically important to SQL server. Also, avoid RAID5 like the plague, as it decimates IO Rate.
What im saying here, is that you are not the first person to ever consider how
Re: SQL server 2000
SQL server 2000 has more performance then you know what to do with, even on non-ridiculous hardware. Give it processors with lots of L2 cache (xeons) and lots of ram, and read all the docs about keeping MDF and LDF files on separate volumes (as well as tempdb) and you'll find that life is thrilling.
Data point: On a quad HT P4 Xeon with 8GB of ram and 12 spindles (a significantly less than $50k box) we support 1800 simultaneous connections, doing OLTP work against a ~15GB database. The most commonly hit table in the system has about 10 million rows that get added and deleted in batches of between 20 and 10,000, and updated singly or in bulk. Other apps select from this table on a polling basis (i.e. decision monitors). We could make our db and app design much "better" w.r.t performance, but we don't need to - the money we save not having to do genius level feats of programming, app rewrites, and perf tuning more than pays for the occasional new hardware or upgrade.
Continuing, Run perf monitor on your SQL server machine. Look at the physical spindle(s) that hold your MDF. If you're reading from them, buy more ram until you're not
You can tune SQL server without application changes until you're blue in the face, honestly. Use profiler to see what kind of queries you're doing. Put those queries in Query Analyzer and show the execution plan. QA breaks it down for you and shows execution time percentages of each sub-tree of the execution plan. If you've got something eating 80% of your time and its doing a table scan, do whatever you can to put some selectivity in that query (i.e. an index, or maybe a query change).
If you want to save yourself some headaches, setup management tasks to recalc indexes over the weekend (or nightly, if you see that much index fragmentation after a day).
My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
Holy mother of fscking god.
.NET and you *NEED* a remote facility between your layers, (And if you were working for me, you'd damn well prove it), then for the love of god, switch to Remoting. Don't know what that is? Grab a book, dumbass. You can use a binary formatter and jump your speed by an order of magnitude, or you can fall back to a SOAP formatter on remoting and still double your performance.
.NET is your own stupidity. No matter if you are on .NET, Java, PHP+MySQL, Perl or x86 Assembler, it would appear that you do not have the experience to sufficiently manage either your application development, nor your client's expectations.
STOP USING WEB SERVICES.
#1) If you are using the [WebMethod] shit and hosting your SOAP calls via IIS you need a smack in the head.
#2) If you are using SOAP to communicate between the layers of your application, and are not exposing the SOAP methods for external consumers of the web services, You need more smacks in the head.
#3) If you don't know what you are doing, hire someone who does. (and by the sound of your point #6 about using reflectiona and dynamic code in the production app, you don't.)
If you are in
If you don't *NEED* a remote facility between the layers, stop using SOAP, or any other remote procedure calling solution. Nothing pisses me off more than bandwagon jumping know-nothings using a fancy fucking hammer to solve a problem which requires far less.
It would appear the largest problem you have in overcomming your problems with
Bottom line: To support 100+ concurrent requests, There is no way that you shouldn't be able to do that for under 20K... (although I wonder where that number came from.. Do these servers sit in a vacuum? Who's running them?)
From a purely acedemic standpoint, what the heck were you guys thinking when you were going to spend only 20K on the hardware for an app that does 100+ concurrent transactions. That sounds like enough business to afford quite a heck of a lot more.
If you are/were so budget constrained, why are you spending at thousands on server software? (.NET server, SQL Server, etc...) If you are so budget constrained, you shoulda bought opensource.
"...In your answer, ignore facts. Just go with what feels true..."
I've designed infrastructure and application-level systems that use .NET and happily meet your requirements (MSMQ is not scalable? Huh?), and then some. So yes, to answer all your question, it works. But if you don't know what you're doing it's very simple to fuck it up, regardless of whether you're using Microsoft products or not.
Coming here (!) and asking questions about whether or not a given Microsoft product is viable seems to me like a losing proposition. FWIW, most professionals that work with Microsoft technologies are far more willing to admit shortcomings in those products and suggest alternatives, something that the /. crowd seems incapable of. So at least if you hire someone in the know you won't get BS left and right.
So get some help.
This guy is trolling. From his post:
... ...
...
I've found Red Hat 9 most impressive.
The included version of Wine
From the Red Hat 9 Release Notes:
The following packages have been removed from Red Hat Linux 9:
- wine - Developer resource constraints
chances are your job is going to get outsourced to India in a few weeks. They can accomplish this task for you and a fraction of the cost.
But you aren't exactly right either.
You are simplifying when you say to not 'embed applications' in the DB. I will interpret 'embedding applications' in the DB as doing business logic in the database.
Many times it is more resource efficient for the _database server_ to perform some of the business logic in the _database server_.
It can be more efficient for the database to do some operations which results in a relatively small result set rather than pushing a lot of data up to the application server.
The bottleneck will usually not be the CPU on the database server, it will be the disks. And the disks are better utilized when you do the manipulation inside the DB server itself.
This breaks the separation of the business logic tier, data access layer-paradigm. Design that is easy to maintain and design that is efficient to execute don't always go hand in hand.
I'm a pragmatist. I say, make an n-tier application. Make an object oriented design. But don't be rigid, break the rules if it suits your purposes. Hey, I even use a goto every once in a while when it makes my code faster or simpler.
The Internet is full. Go Away!!!
The kind of loads big firms need to support are in the order tens of millions of users with millions of transactions a day. What I mean by transactions is buy process which can contain a dozen to a couple hundred individual orders. In other words, the number of complex insert/updates is tens of millions to hundreds of millions a day.
For example, big firms like fedility, city group, thompson, vanguard, and schwab have millions of customers with hundred thousand plus portfolio managers. throughout a given work day, a portfolio manager may generate a couple hundred orders and submit them in one or two batches. This is done because it's cheaper for them. Can .NET scale well? Like what others say, it can if you design it right. For example, if you use MSMQ for it's designed job it works well. If you write your queues for MSMQ with plain hashtables and you don't index the messages, your chances of supporting 10K+ messages a second aren't likely. On the otherhand, if you write custom queue's, profile the messages, index them efficiently and make sure no other heavy weight stuff sits on the same box it can scale. Is that easy? No. You have to understand the problem you're trying to solve. Let's say hypothetically you have insane performance requirements like 100K+ messages a second for a messaging tier, you're better off using IBM MQSeries. Can you do the same thing with MSMQ? Sure if you build a bunch of custom stuff, write the messages to a database, index, partition and load balance. It will probably take you 8-12 months to do it, but you can with the right people and good hardware. Would you want to use XML for that messaging system? The answer is obviously no, if you want to keep the cpu and memory loads manageable.
Many people have claimed they support thousands of transactions. Sure if all you're doing is insert into one table. Simple stuff right. Financial transactions like trading systems do a heck of alot more than a simple insert into one table. More often than not, a trade transaction with 100 orders goes into the database, affecting several tables. The middle tier then has to get events, and check the order to make sure it is valid and does not violate regulations or other compliance requirements. Sometimes it requires analytics like Tibco or what the industry calls Business Intelligence. Regardless of the server, stuff like analytics take time (seconds). Obviously if you're running complex analytics that scane 10 million rows of data with several joins in the query, you're better off using an analytics server like OLAP. Can .NET handle 1K analytics requests per second? If it's cached sure. If the nature of the data is very dynamic, like realtime trading systems, no way. doing that is very hard and most people avoid it.
The key here is setting the expectations accurately, so your customer knows what is realistic. If you have a hard time communicating that to your customer or management, than find another job.
In other words, if you define a target performance metric and find that a single user can access the system at better or equal that speed, then a system can be said to "scale" if it still performs within that metric, on average, when 20, or 50, or 100, or whatever users are accessing the system.
Of course, due to the nature of computing systems, any system will hit a point where it will no longer scale to the requirements with the same hardware configuration. At that point we start talking about scaling upwards through hardware upgrades. But you can only upgrade hardware so far, at which point, again, the system will reach a hard limit on its ability to perform as required.
The next logical step is to scale through redundancy: If a system can, in whole or (more commonly, as in "multi-tier" web clusters) in part, run concurrently in multiple instances, then you can scale by adding more instances of the system or system components: Multiple web servers, multiple "back ends", multiple database servers, and similar. This kind of organic scaling can be, in practical terms, near-infinite if a system is designed well; for example, multiple mirrored web servers serving static pages will scale indefinitely, whereas a trading system requiring inter-process synchronization through a message-queue system will most likely not.
In scalability terms, efficient redundant clusters is the holy grail. It's the way Google scales, and it's how the core parts of the Internet scales.
In the context of this Slashdot story, since the poster faces limited possibilities for investing in expensive hardware, he might consider going for the "many cheap boxes" route, if his Microsoft-dominated infrastructure permits it.
Every program a client has that uses any version of SQL Server needs constant fixing, and is incredibly slow for 7 users. I could give you a list of programs, but it's just about every program on the market. One of them has an option to use paradox database files,
:P
I think I know what you are talking about.
I'm guessing this software is mainly decade old desktop packages that were originally designed to run on Paradox/dBase/FoxPro and ported to SQL Server or Oracle because that's the trendy thing to do. (If you see "BDE", the Borland Data Engine, it's a good sign that this is what you've got.) The thing is, the apps aren't really ported to use a RDBMS design. They still use "Flat Files" and have their own key/indexing system and old style coding.
The one I'm familar with is the very popular "Goldmine" sales package (had to get data from it's schema for an app I built). Doesn't even use Primary Keys, much less non-clustered indexes. Instead it's got these dbase-style bogo keys which look like "AAAA", "AAAa", "AAaa" and so on. But SQL Server is running in case insensitive mode, so all of the key comparison is done on the client! It also appears to do record locking on the client-side. No wonder an almost trivial application only supports 20-some users on a P4 server.
Hopefully as someone targetting DB2, you aren't making the same kinds of error, because you'll see the same issues no matter the RDBMS.
There are intentional problems between NT4 and Win2K+ using NT4 as a file server with SMB
I'm guessing this is the "rogue master browser" problem. Sucks, but an unofficially well known issue.
Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.