Title :
Trends in retrieval system performance
Author :
Zobel, Justin ; Williams, Hugh E. ; Kimberley, Sam
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., RMIT Univ., Melbourne, Vic., Australia
fDate :
6/22/1905 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Computer technology is continually developing, with ongoing rapid improvements in processor speed and disk capacity. At the same time, demands on retrieval systems are increasing, with, in applications such as World-Wide Web search engines, growth in data volumes outstripping gains in hardware performance. We experimentally explore the relationship between hardware and data volumes using a new framework designed for retrieval systems. We show that changes in performance depend entirely on the application: in some cases, even with large increases in data volume, the faster hardware allows improvements in response time; but in other cases, performance degrades far more than either raw hardware statistics or speed on processor-bound tasks would suggest. Overall, it appears that seek times rather than processor limitations are a crucial bottleneck and there is little likelihood of reductions in retrieval system response time without improvements in disk performance
Keywords :
information resources; information retrieval systems; software performance evaluation; World Wide Web; data volume; experiment; information retrieval system performance; performance; response time; search engines; Application software; Degradation; Delay; Hardware; Information retrieval; Performance gain; Search engines; Statistics; System performance; Web search;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Science Conference, 2000. ACSC 2000. 23rd Australasian
Conference_Location :
Canberra, ACT
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-0518-X
DOI :
10.1109/ACSC.2000.824410