Some notable benchmarks from the OrioleDB beta7 release:
* 5.5x Faster at 500 Warehouses: In TPC-C benchmarks with 500 warehouses, OrioleDB outperformed PostgreSQL's default heap tables by 5.5 times. This highlights significant gains in workloads that stress shared memory cache bottlenecks.
* 2.7x Faster at 1000 Warehouses: Even when the data doesn't fit into the OS memory cache (at 1000 warehouses), OrioleDB was 2.7 times faster. Its index-organized tables improve data locality, reducing disk I/O and boosting performance.
Run your own workloads or existing benchmarks like go-tpc or HammerDB to see the performance differences firsthand. We Would love to hear about others' experiences with OrioleDB, especially in production-like environments or with different workloads.
* 5.5x Faster at 500 Warehouses: In TPC-C benchmarks with 500 warehouses, OrioleDB outperformed PostgreSQL's default heap tables by 5.5 times. This highlights significant gains in workloads that stress shared memory cache bottlenecks.
* 2.7x Faster at 1000 Warehouses: Even when the data doesn't fit into the OS memory cache (at 1000 warehouses), OrioleDB was 2.7 times faster. Its index-organized tables improve data locality, reducing disk I/O and boosting performance.
Try it yourself:
Clone the OrioleDB repository from GitHub and follow the build instructions, or use their Docker image. https://github.com/orioledb/orioledb#installation Alternatively, run OrioleDB on Supabase. Read the blog post for more details. https://supabase.com/blog/orioledb-launch
Run your own workloads or existing benchmarks like go-tpc or HammerDB to see the performance differences firsthand. We Would love to hear about others' experiences with OrioleDB, especially in production-like environments or with different workloads.