Oren Eini

aka Ayende Rahien

Oren Eini

CEO of RavenDB

a NoSQL Open Source Document Database

Get in touch with me:

oren@ravendb.net +972 52-548-6969

Posts: 7,582
|
Comments: 51,212

Copyright ©️ Ayende Rahien 2004 — 2025

Privacy Policy · Terms
filter by tags archive
stack view grid view
  • architecture (611) rss
  • bugs (450) rss
  • challanges (123) rss
  • community (379) rss
  • databases (481) rss
  • design (895) rss
  • development (641) rss
  • hibernating-practices (71) rss
  • miscellaneous (592) rss
  • performance (397) rss
  • programming (1085) rss
  • raven (1448) rss
  • ravendb.net (532) rss
  • reviews (184) rss
  • 2025
    • June (4)
    • May (10)
    • April (10)
    • March (10)
    • February (7)
    • January (12)
  • 2024
    • December (3)
    • November (2)
    • October (1)
    • September (3)
    • August (5)
    • July (10)
    • June (4)
    • May (6)
    • April (2)
    • March (8)
    • February (2)
    • January (14)
  • 2023
    • December (4)
    • October (4)
    • September (6)
    • August (12)
    • July (5)
    • June (15)
    • May (3)
    • April (11)
    • March (5)
    • February (5)
    • January (8)
  • 2022
    • December (5)
    • November (7)
    • October (7)
    • September (9)
    • August (10)
    • July (15)
    • June (12)
    • May (9)
    • April (14)
    • March (15)
    • February (13)
    • January (16)
  • 2021
    • December (23)
    • November (20)
    • October (16)
    • September (6)
    • August (16)
    • July (11)
    • June (16)
    • May (4)
    • April (10)
    • March (11)
    • February (15)
    • January (14)
  • 2020
    • December (10)
    • November (13)
    • October (15)
    • September (6)
    • August (9)
    • July (9)
    • June (17)
    • May (15)
    • April (14)
    • March (21)
    • February (16)
    • January (13)
  • 2019
    • December (17)
    • November (14)
    • October (16)
    • September (10)
    • August (8)
    • July (16)
    • June (11)
    • May (13)
    • April (18)
    • March (12)
    • February (19)
    • January (23)
  • 2018
    • December (15)
    • November (14)
    • October (19)
    • September (18)
    • August (23)
    • July (20)
    • June (20)
    • May (23)
    • April (15)
    • March (23)
    • February (19)
    • January (23)
  • 2017
    • December (21)
    • November (24)
    • October (22)
    • September (21)
    • August (23)
    • July (21)
    • June (24)
    • May (21)
    • April (21)
    • March (23)
    • February (20)
    • January (23)
  • 2016
    • December (17)
    • November (18)
    • October (22)
    • September (18)
    • August (23)
    • July (22)
    • June (17)
    • May (24)
    • April (16)
    • March (16)
    • February (21)
    • January (21)
  • 2015
    • December (5)
    • November (10)
    • October (9)
    • September (17)
    • August (20)
    • July (17)
    • June (4)
    • May (12)
    • April (9)
    • March (8)
    • February (25)
    • January (17)
  • 2014
    • December (22)
    • November (19)
    • October (21)
    • September (37)
    • August (24)
    • July (23)
    • June (13)
    • May (19)
    • April (24)
    • March (23)
    • February (21)
    • January (24)
  • 2013
    • December (23)
    • November (29)
    • October (27)
    • September (26)
    • August (24)
    • July (24)
    • June (23)
    • May (25)
    • April (26)
    • March (24)
    • February (24)
    • January (21)
  • 2012
    • December (19)
    • November (22)
    • October (27)
    • September (24)
    • August (30)
    • July (23)
    • June (25)
    • May (23)
    • April (25)
    • March (25)
    • February (28)
    • January (24)
  • 2011
    • December (17)
    • November (14)
    • October (24)
    • September (28)
    • August (27)
    • July (30)
    • June (19)
    • May (16)
    • April (30)
    • March (23)
    • February (11)
    • January (26)
  • 2010
    • December (29)
    • November (28)
    • October (35)
    • September (33)
    • August (44)
    • July (17)
    • June (20)
    • May (53)
    • April (29)
    • March (35)
    • February (33)
    • January (36)
  • 2009
    • December (37)
    • November (35)
    • October (53)
    • September (60)
    • August (66)
    • July (29)
    • June (24)
    • May (52)
    • April (63)
    • March (35)
    • February (53)
    • January (50)
  • 2008
    • December (58)
    • November (65)
    • October (46)
    • September (48)
    • August (96)
    • July (87)
    • June (45)
    • May (51)
    • April (52)
    • March (70)
    • February (43)
    • January (49)
  • 2007
    • December (100)
    • November (52)
    • October (109)
    • September (68)
    • August (80)
    • July (56)
    • June (150)
    • May (115)
    • April (73)
    • March (124)
    • February (102)
    • January (68)
  • 2006
    • December (95)
    • November (53)
    • October (120)
    • September (57)
    • August (88)
    • July (54)
    • June (103)
    • May (89)
    • April (84)
    • March (143)
    • February (78)
    • January (64)
  • 2005
    • December (70)
    • November (97)
    • October (91)
    • September (61)
    • August (74)
    • July (92)
    • June (100)
    • May (53)
    • April (42)
    • March (41)
    • February (84)
    • January (31)
  • 2004
    • December (49)
    • November (26)
    • October (26)
    • September (6)
    • April (10)
Deep Dive into RavenDB webinars
  previous post next post  
Jan 03 2010

Why all the performance posts?

time to read 1 min | 53 words

For the last week or so I have been posting just about performance. Can you figure out why? Yes, I just finish doing a heavy optimization for the profiler, but why so many posts?

The answer is quite simple, but I want to see what conspiracies you are going to put out.

Tweet Share Share 21 comments
Tags:
  • Miscellaneous

  previous post next post  

Comments

Anders
03 Jan 2010
10:40 AM
Anders

Simply because you always post about current work and interests? Thats also why we read them...

Mikael Henrikson
03 Jan 2010
10:43 AM
Mikael Henrikson

Well, what about remote profiling / profiling server listening to all current profilers (nh, ef, l2s h) all in one?

I did enjoy the reasoning in the posts and I sure learnt some ways to optimize.

Davy Brion
03 Jan 2010
12:45 PM
Davy Brion

because you want to show that you built NH Prof without worrying up-front about small optimizations and then waited until problems arose so you could profile your code and then fix the most pressing issues in as few places as possible for a maximum benefit? As in: the way it should be done :)

El Guapo
03 Jan 2010
13:23 PM
El Guapo

You are writing another book. OK maybe another MSDN article.

Mark Nijhof
03 Jan 2010
15:21 PM
Mark Nijhof

+1 on Davy

Arnis L.
03 Jan 2010
17:19 PM
Arnis L.

Because you got nothing left to write about? :D

Dmitry
03 Jan 2010
17:22 PM
Dmitry

You are doing a Tekpub feature or a course on .NET code optimization

silk
03 Jan 2010
17:26 PM
silk

Because you want to advertise your product, make it more visible, show how good it is, sell more copier, earn more money and rule the world, or sth like that ;)

Rik Hemsley
03 Jan 2010
17:59 PM
Rik Hemsley

Microsoft want to buy it?

Richard Dingwall
03 Jan 2010
20:25 PM
Richard Dingwall

Many optimizations = many posts?

Ben Hall
03 Jan 2010
23:01 PM
Ben Hall

Because so many people get it wrong and you're bored of using slow software?

NC
03 Jan 2010
23:50 PM
NC

Because your stroking your ego?

Ori Almog
03 Jan 2010
23:55 PM
Ori Almog

Because you can

alwin
04 Jan 2010
01:15 AM
alwin

Because you were bored and wrote those posts to fill some of the free time you have plenty of? :)

Nick B
04 Jan 2010
01:49 AM
Nick B

You plan on launching an iphone app of the profiler and thus need to keep resource management tight.

Petar Petrov
04 Jan 2010
08:23 AM
Petar Petrov

Because you will post a challenge(and a reward I suspect) to optimize some code. An reward from you won't be something easy to get :)

meo
04 Jan 2010
12:27 PM
meo

Maybe it is a good way to pump up such skills by yourself?

Mischa Kroon
04 Jan 2010
16:08 PM
Mischa Kroon

Because you want to establish yourself as an expert in the field and want to do some contract work optimising other peoples .NET software.

Ayende Rahien
04 Jan 2010
16:29 PM
Ayende Rahien

Mischa,

God, no.

Perf optimization is some of the most horrifyingly mind numbing work possible.

James L
04 Jan 2010
21:48 PM
James L

Well?

Steve Py
05 Jan 2010
10:17 AM
Steve Py

<conspiracy
Discrediting the most outrageous option. That must mean it's closest to the truth.

Though I'd think the only thing more mind-numbingly boring than performance optimization would be writing about performance optimization... Are you sure you don't just want to be a lion tamer? :)

Comment preview

Comments have been closed on this topic.

Markdown formatting

ESC to close

Markdown turns plain text formatting into fancy HTML formatting.

Phrase Emphasis

*italic*   **bold**
_italic_   __bold__

Links

Inline:

An [example](http://url.com/ "Title")

Reference-style labels (titles are optional):

An [example][id]. Then, anywhere
else in the doc, define the link:
  [id]: http://example.com/  "Title"

Images

Inline (titles are optional):

![alt text](/path/img.jpg "Title")

Reference-style:

![alt text][id]
[id]: /url/to/img.jpg "Title"

Headers

Setext-style:

Header 1
========
Header 2
--------

atx-style (closing #'s are optional):

# Header 1 #
## Header 2 ##
###### Header 6

Lists

Ordered, without paragraphs:

1.  Foo
2.  Bar

Unordered, with paragraphs:

*   A list item.
    With multiple paragraphs.
*   Bar

You can nest them:

*   Abacus
    * answer
*   Bubbles
    1.  bunk
    2.  bupkis
        * BELITTLER
    3. burper
*   Cunning

Blockquotes

> Email-style angle brackets
> are used for blockquotes.
> > And, they can be nested.
> #### Headers in blockquotes
> 
> * You can quote a list.
> * Etc.

Horizontal Rules

Three or more dashes or asterisks:

---
* * *
- - - - 

Manual Line Breaks

End a line with two or more spaces:

Roses are red,   
Violets are blue.

Fenced Code Blocks

Code blocks delimited by 3 or more backticks or tildas:

```
This is a preformatted
code block
```

Header IDs

Set the id of headings with {#<id>} at end of heading line:

## My Heading {#myheading}

Tables

Fruit    |Color
---------|----------
Apples   |Red
Pears	 |Green
Bananas  |Yellow

Definition Lists

Term 1
: Definition 1
Term 2
: Definition 2

Footnotes

Body text with a footnote [^1]
[^1]: Footnote text here

Abbreviations

MDD <- will have title
*[MDD]: MarkdownDeep

 

FUTURE POSTS

  1. RavenDB GenAI Deep Dive - 38 minutes from now
  2. fsync()-ing a directory on Linux (and not Windows) - 3 days from now

There are posts all the way to Jun 09, 2025

RECENT SERIES

  1. Webinar (7):
    05 Jun 2025 - Think inside the database
  2. Recording (16):
    29 May 2025 - RavenDB's Upcoming Optimizations Deep Dive
  3. RavenDB News (2):
    02 May 2025 - May 2025
  4. Production Postmortem (52):
    07 Apr 2025 - The race condition in the interlock
  5. RavenDB (13):
    02 Apr 2025 - .NET Aspire integration
View all series

RECENT COMMENTS

  • Scooletz, Page faults when working with data that is greater than RAM is not an uncommon issue for us. One of the reasons ...
    By Oren Eini on Recording: RavenDB's Upcoming Optimizations Deep Dive
  • What a massive presentation! As a person who spent some time with a db written in .NET I can strongly relate to some points. ...
    By Scooletz on Recording: RavenDB's Upcoming Optimizations Deep Dive
  • I’d love to learn your thoughts on SPANN https://arxiv.org/abs/2111.08566 that with centroids and keeping the posting lists s...
    By Scooletz on Comparing DiskANN in SQL Server & HNSW in RavenDB
  • Joel, The DiskANN paper talks about it being viable for more than a billion vectors datasets.  In such a scenario, it would ...
    By Oren Eini on Comparing DiskANN in SQL Server & HNSW in RavenDB
  • Do you know why they chose DiskANN? These things are usually about tradeoffs but it seems DiskANN is just worse in every way.
    By Joel on Comparing DiskANN in SQL Server & HNSW in RavenDB

Syndication

Main feed Feed Stats
Comments feed   Comments Feed Stats
}