7
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
this post was submitted on 27 Jul 2024
7 points (81.8% liked)
Django
406 readers
1 users here now
Django Project
- Django Project, the web framework for perfectionists with deadlines
- Django Code of Conduct
- Django Documentation
- Django Blog/News
- Support Django
Django Community
- Discord
- Project forum
- StackOverflow
- #django IRC Channel
- Django Users mailing list
- Django Developers mailing list
- Jazzband, a community maintaining Python projects
Django Ecosystem
Jobs
Learning/Docs
- Django Project tutorial
- Django Girls Tutorial
- Django Packages
- Classy Class-Based Views
- Classy Django REST Framework
- Classy DB
Podcasts:
Related Fediverse communities
- #django on Mastodon
- c/Python on programming.dev
- c/PostgreSQL on programming.dev
Feeds
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
Django ORM queries should be so fast that any difference between the overlying OS shouldn't have a perceptible effect. If however you're doing a huge number of queries on a single page, or have something custom going on under the hood that runs a query with like, 12 joins, then it could be the fact that
postgresql-client
in Debian is likely much older than in Ubuntu.If you're also running PostgreSQL on the same server (not recommended for production!) then the PostgreSQL version will likely be different too.
I'm assuming that you're running the same version of all your Python dependencies in both places. If not, the version of
psycopg
could have an effect as well.But seriously, if the difference is noticeable, it's probably none of these things. It's more likely network issues between the different environments. Network lag is a much better candidate for something like this.