Order(n) order(t) order(j) order(1) – Intel AS/400 RISC Server User Manual

Page 318

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SQL records in a result
set

Program stack storage

Java Virtual Machine
and most WebSphere
storage

System values

Operating System
copies (e.g. Data Base)
copies of application
records

SQL Result Set
(nonrecord)

Static storage from
RPG and COBOL.
Static final in Java.

Direct Execution Java
Programs

Java (and C/C++)
objects

File Buffers of all kinds

Total Job Storage

Subsystem Descriptions

Data Base Records and
IFS file records

Java threads

Just In Time compiled
programs (Java *JIT)

ILE and OS/400
Programs

Order(N)

Order(t)

Order(j)

Order(1)

A Brief Example

To show these concepts, consider a simple example.

Part of a financial system has three logical elements to deal with:

1. An order record (order summary including customer information, sales tax, etc.)
2. An order detail record (individual purchased items, quantities, prices).
3. A table containing international currency rates of exchange between two arbitrary countries.

Question: What is more important? Reducing the cost of the detail record by a couple of bytes, or
reducing the currency table from a cost of N squared (where “N” is the number of countries) to 2 times N.

There are two obvious implementations of the currency table:

1. Implement the table as a two dimensional array such that CurrencyExchangei,j will give the exchange
between country

i

and country

j

for all countries.

2. Implement the table as a single dimension array with the ith element being the exchange rate between
country

i

and the US dollar. One can convert to any country simply by converting twice; once to dollars

and once to the other currency.

Clearly, the second is more storage efficient.

Now consider the first problem. The detail record looks like this:

Quantity as a four byte number (9B or 10B in RPG terms).
Name of the item (up to 60 characters)
Price of the item (as a zoned decimal field, 15 total digits with two decimal points).

A simple scrub would give:

Quantity as a two byte number (4B in RPG terms).
Name of the item (probably still 60 characters)
Price of the item (as a packed decimal field, probably 10 total digits with two decimal points).

IBM i 6.1 Performance Capabilities Reference - January/April/October 2008

©

Copyright IBM Corp. 2008

Chapter 20 - General Tips and Techniques

318

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