Skip to main content

Database Performance Tuning on AIX

An IBM Redbooks publication

Note: This is publication is now archived. For reference only.

thumbnail 

Published on 20 January 2003

  1. .PDF (5.5 MB)

 Order hardcopy
Share this page:   

ISBN-10: 073842790X
ISBN-13: 9780738427904
IBM Form #: SG24-5511-01


Authors: Budi Darmawan, Gary Groenewald, Allan Irving, Sergio Henrique Soares Monteiro and Keirnan M. Snedeker

    menu icon

    Abstract

    This IBM Redbooks publication is designed to help system designers, system administrators, and database administrators design, size, implement, maintain, monitor, and tune a Relational Database Management System (RDBMS) for optimal performance on AIX. RDBMS is usually a significant factor in building the profit line of a company. They represent an important investment and their performance is vital to the success of the company.

    This book contains hints and tips from experts that work on RDBMS performance every day. It also provides introductions to general database layout concepts from a performance point of view, design and sizing guidelines, tuning recommendations, and performance and tuning information for DB2 UDB, Oracle, and IBM Informix databases.

    The performance tips provided here relate to the things that a system administrator or database administrator can change. This book does not cover performance tuning issues that relate to application and database design, including SQL query tuning.

    Table of Contents

    Chapter 1. Introduction to this redbook

    Part 1. RDBMS concepts

    Chapter 2. Introduction to relational database system concepts

    Chapter 3. Types of workload

    Chapter 4. DB2 Universal Database

    Chapter 5. Oracle databases

    Chapter 6. IBM Informix Dynamix Server

    Part 2. System design and sizing

    Chapter 7. Sizing a database system

    Chapter 8. Designing RDBMS servers

    Chapter 9. Designing a disk subsystem

    Part 3. System optimization

    Chapter 10. Implementing your database

    Chapter 11. Monitoring an RDBMS system for performance

    Chapter 12. Tuning an RDBMS system

    Chapter 13. AIX and hardware tuning considerations

    Chapter 14. DB2 UDB tuning

    Chapter 15. Oracle tuning

    Chapter 16. IBM Informix Dynamic Server tuning

     

    Others who read this also read