Jamie Lokier wrote:Definitely. "several leaders" aka partitioning is also becoming increasing paired with efforts at enhancing locality of reference. Both Google and Amazon sort their distributed tables lexographically, which [ideally] results in similar data being stored near each other. A bit of an improvement over partitioning-by-hash, anyway, for some workloads. Jeff --
| Linus Torvalds | Linux 2.6.26-rc4 |
| Satyam Sharma | Re: 2.6.23-rc6-mm1 |
| Chuck Ebbert | Why do so many machines need "noapic"? |
| Jan Engelhardt | Re: LSM conversion to static interface |
| Theo de Raadt | That whole "Linux stealing our code" thing |
| Marco Peereboom | Re: Real men don't attack straw men |
| Marius ROMAN | 1440x900 resolution problem |
| GVG GVG | ssh_exchange_identification: Connection closed by remote host |
git: | |
| Martin Langhoff | Re: git versus CVS (versus bk) |
| Linus Torvalds | People unaware of the importance of "git gc"? |
| Martin Langhoff | Handling large files with GIT |
| Jeff King | Re: Git vs Monotone |
| David Miller | [GIT]: Networking |
| Matheos Worku | 2.6.24 BUG: soft lockup - CPU#X |
| Auke Kok | [PATCH] e1000e: test MSI interrupts |
| Wang Jian | drivers/net/phy/marvell.c: 88e1111 can't get out sleep mode |
