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#Tableau public linux windows#
Hypotheses: Linux runs about 5-10% fast than Windows on average. We’ll do a call back to 5 th grade science class and use the scientific method to set up our tests. While I tried to use scenarios that were accurate to real life, your mileage may vary depending on your actual workload and use cases. I needed to test scenarios where the server was saturated and where the server is idle to make sure there isn’t a true runaway winner in the brawl. I didn’t want to spend too much time fixing workbooks or running tests only to find out that my workbooks were behaving so poorly that no server would have run them well. I needed the ability to fully saturate the servers quickly while not being limited by my source data or my machine’s ability to send many requests to the servers themselves.
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The setup for this test is a little contrived. Enter this testing suite where we put our data where our mouth is! The Tests Over the past couple years, we’ve felt like Tableau Server is faster on Linux, but we’ve never had cold hard data to back up these feelings. Previous InterWorks testing showed Linux performed much better than Windows however, because the Linux version of Tableau Server that we tested used Hyper and the Windows version didn’t yet have it, we never had a great indicator of how much those gains were due to Hyper versus the operating system. While minimizing costs for infrastructure has always been a concern, with more companies moving to cloud platforms, there’s never been a better time to re-evaluate the operational costs of applications.