The FINANCIAL — On October 11, Oracle announced a new world record TPC-C benchmark result for Oracle Database 11g running on Sun SPARC servers with CMT technology and the Sun Solaris Operating System (1).
This result proves that the Oracle-Sun combination runs faster than IBM DB2 running on IBM’s flagship Power 595(2).
The Oracle-Sun benchmark used an innovative combination of Sun’s fast CMT servers to power the database, along with Sun’s new flash technology to speed I/O.
"Oracle Real Application Clusters allowed Sun and Oracle to scale performance on a 12-Node Sun SPARC Enterprise T5440 cluster. Oracle Real Application Clusters is in production use at thousands of customers, enabling transparent scaling of real-world business applications," Oracle informed.
With this benchmark, Oracle and Sun become the first vendors to achieve world record TPC-C performance results using Flash Storage technology. Using the Sun Storage F5100 Flash Array, Oracle and Sun were able to set the world record using eight times less hardware than IBM used for its largest benchmark (3).
The Oracle-Sun configuration consumed four times less energy than the IBM configuration even though it ran 26 percent faster.
The Oracle-Sun benchmark demonstrated 16 times better transaction response times than the IBM benchmark(4).
Oracle Database 11g running on the Solaris™ 10 Operating System achieved a record-breaking 7.7 million tpmC at $2.34/tpmC.
Oracle is now the TPC-C world record holder in both major categories – performance(1) and price/performance(5).
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