Date of Conferral

2020

Degree

Doctor of Information Technology (D.I.T.)

School

Information Systems and Technology

Advisor

Steven Case

Abstract

Many businesses are moving their infrastructure to the cloud and may not fully understand the factors that can increase costs. With so many factors available to improve throughput in a database, it can be difficult for a database administrator to know which factors can provide the best efficiency to maintain lower costs. Grounded in Six Sigma theoretical framework, the purpose of this quantitative, quasi-experimental study was to evaluate the relationship between the time of day, the number of concurrent users, InnoDB buffer pool size, InnoDB Input/Output capacity, and MySQL transaction throughput to a MySQL database running on a cloud, virtual, database server. Data were collected from Debian Linux virtual machines (VMs) on Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud Platform, and Microsoft Azure using HammerDB database benchmarking software. The results of the one-way ANOVA were not significant. A key recommendation is to study further other factors and a more in-depth investigation into each cloud provider's performance. The implications for positive social change include the potential for database administrators to make informed decisions on how to configure MySQL to run in a VM and choose the best cloud provider so that nonprofits may serve their clients more efficiently.

Share

 
COinS