The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread
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@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
I’ve been doing this shit professionally for 3 decades and I shake my head at how we can almost max out RAM on a system with FIVE TERABYTES of the stuff because some dude wanted to see what an option in a report did.

but did they use a cover sheet for their TPS report?
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@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
I think it’s .5 TB unless metric TBs are smaller or something?
Machine has 5 terabytes of RAM which the dude almost maxed out by consuming 10% of it (or nearly all of the free memory) for his report.
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I saw your poor math prior to your edit!
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@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
I think it’s .5 TB unless metric TBs are smaller or something?
Machine has 5 terabytes of RAM which the dude almost maxed out by consuming 10% of it (or nearly all of the free memory) for his report.
Sounds like a poorly coded application on the machine if it uses 4.5TB of memory just to run it and leaves the poor user only 500GB for doing actual work with the tool. I would get rid of my offshore contracted programmers if I were them.
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i remember being told that “no matter how much RAM you have installed, windows will use half or more of it”.
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@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
I think it’s .5 TB unless metric TBs are smaller or something?
Machine has 5 terabytes of RAM which the dude almost maxed out by consuming 10% of it (or nearly all of the free memory) for his report.
Sounds like a poorly coded application on the machine if it uses 4.5TB of memory just to run it and leaves the poor user only 500GB for doing actual work with the tool. I would get rid of my offshore contracted programmers if I were them.
The machine is used by 10K people for hundreds of different processes but, yeah, something’s fucked if one guy came in over the top and consumed 500gb just by running a single report.
I don’t know what the issue is but I’ve been forming the opinion that them running the BI tool on the same hardware as the ERP is a mistake. But I don’t know; it’s all above my paygrade and I don’t have enough info to even make informed speculation. I only even hear about it when it’s close to hitting the fan like today.
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Maybe all that RAM is being used by your anti-Cambodian spy services! Sounds like another meeting from the authorities is in order!
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@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
that them running the BI tool on the same hardware as the ERP is a mistake.
you think? two extremely memory hungry applications that also pound the same disk subsytem with random IO on the physical box is an extremely bad idea.
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@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
I think it’s .5 TB unless metric TBs are smaller or something?
Machine has 5 terabytes of RAM which the dude almost maxed out by consuming 10% of it (or nearly all of the free memory) for his report.
Sounds like a poorly coded application on the machine if it uses 4.5TB of memory just to run it and leaves the poor user only 500GB for doing actual work with the tool. I would get rid of my offshore contracted programmers if I were them.
The machine is used by 10K people for hundreds of different processes but, yeah, something’s fucked if one guy came in over the top and consumed 500gb just by running a single report.
I don’t know what the issue is but I’ve been forming the opinion that them running the BI tool on the same hardware as the ERP is a mistake. But I don’t know; it’s all above my paygrade and I don’t have enough info to even make informed speculation. I only even hear about it when it’s close to hitting the fan like today.
Maybe a cache option is on and shouldn’t be? Typically the db should be streaming the answer, nor storing it… Installing BI on the ERP server is even beyond my company stupid.
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@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
I’ve been doing this shit professionally for 3 decades and I shake my head at how we can almost max out RAM on a system with FIVE TERABYTES of the stuff because some dude wanted to see what an option in a report did.

Hardware explosion makes for sloppy children.
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@madrebel said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
that them running the BI tool on the same hardware as the ERP is a mistake.
you think? two extremely memory hungry applications that also pound the same disk subsytem with random IO on the physical box is an extremely bad idea.
Adding on network bottleneck and overhead is better?
For our bigass apps, we’ll often have the main app where the updates occur and then a shadow reporting database mirrored to the main one just for splitting resources. And then in the most crucial case a nightly download to a third reporting database…
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@Kilemall said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
I’ve been doing this shit professionally for 3 decades and I shake my head at how we can almost max out RAM on a system with FIVE TERABYTES of the stuff because some dude wanted to see what an option in a report did.

Hardware explosion makes for sloppy children.
Exploding hardware does look cool though.
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@Kilemall said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@madrebel said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
that them running the BI tool on the same hardware as the ERP is a mistake.
you think? two extremely memory hungry applications that also pound the same disk subsytem with random IO on the physical box is an extremely bad idea.
Adding on network bottleneck and overhead is better?
For our bigass apps, we’ll often have the main app where the updates occur and then a shadow reporting database mirrored to the main one just for splitting resources. And then in the most crucial case a nightly download to a third reporting database…
Same, we have a replication layer for reporting/extraction and then extract data from that into a lake for BI.
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@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Kilemall said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@madrebel said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Hog said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
that them running the BI tool on the same hardware as the ERP is a mistake.
you think? two extremely memory hungry applications that also pound the same disk subsytem with random IO on the physical box is an extremely bad idea.
Adding on network bottleneck and overhead is better?
For our bigass apps, we’ll often have the main app where the updates occur and then a shadow reporting database mirrored to the main one just for splitting resources. And then in the most crucial case a nightly download to a third reporting database…
Same, we have a replication layer for reporting/extraction and then extract data from that into a lake for BI.
BI, the most common data kingdom out there.
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@Kilemall said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
Adding on network bottleneck and overhead is better?
network bottleneck? oh you must be poor and can’t afford 100GbE.
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@madrebel said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
@Kilemall said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
Adding on network bottleneck and overhead is better?
network bottleneck? oh you must be poor and can’t afford 100GbE.
Overhead on feeding it in and handling while not particularly reducing memory/IO, just keeping the query hog itself off.
And I already told you the solution so piss off with your alpha shit.
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someone’s mad about being poor …
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I sure am.
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I’m not happy about not being rich and retired.
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@Gators1 said in The OFFICIAL tech stuff thread:
I’m not happy about not being rich and retired.
i’ve been retired since 1999. unfortunately i kinda blew the other part.


