Oracle Benchmark Outperforms IBM DB2's Best Result

Oracle announced a new world record TPC-H 300 gigabyte (GB) data warehousing benchmark for Oracle Database 10g Release 2 and Oracle Real Application Clusters on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, overtaking IBM DB2's best benchmark performance in the same category. Running atop an eight-node HP BladeSystem cluster of ProLiant BL25p server blades, each with one AMD Opteron 2.6 GHz processor and Red Hat Enterprise Linux v.4, Oracle Database 10g Release 2 and Oracle Real Application Clusters achieved record-breaking performance of 13,284.2 QphH@300GB with a price- performance ratio of $34.20/QphH@300GB. This new industry-leading result surpasses IBM DB2's best TPC-H 300 GB benchmark running on IBM hardware using half the number of processors. "Oracle's commitment to delivering a world-class database with outstanding performance continues to see proof in these benchmark results," said Oracle Vice President of Server Performance, Richard Sarwal. "This is yet another validation of Oracle Database 10g Release 2, which, coupled with the high efficiency of Linux running on the HP BladeSystem, makes a great value proposition for organizations." As the leading database for production data warehousing, Oracle Database 10g provides a single, integrated database engine for scalable and high performing data warehousing implementations. This new record-breaking benchmark illustrates why customers choose Oracle on Linux for performance, power, value and reliability. "These benchmarks further reflect the benefits HP provides Linux customers," said HP BladeSystem Director, Mark Potter. "Oracle runs fast on the HP BladeSystem, allowing companies to streamline their business processes, optimize resources and increase performance. This new world record is further evidence that the powerful combination of Oracle on Linux powered by standards-based HP BladeSystem solutions can enable customers to achieve the highest levels of efficiency from their IT investments through scalability, manageability, and cost savings."