When it comes to cluster sizes, the documentation states that, for example an XS cluster consists on 1 server. But I have been looking for the server specifications and I can't seem to find any documentation on this topic.
2 Answers
For AWS snowflake, if you open the browser console in Chrome (F12) and run this SQL in the normal snowflake window:
SELECT 1/0;
you will get an error, the network responce for that message has too much information, but one part states the server EC2 instance type as
"warehouseServerType" : "c5d.2xlarge",
which was an x-small
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Ahh - good research! And my uneducated guess was - close, but no cigar... Commented Nov 21, 2019 at 21:12
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2FYI, this answer has now been quoted in an academic paper - "Towards Cost-Optimal Query Processing in the Cloud" by Leis and Kuschewski. Commented May 10, 2021 at 20:18
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2Just check again today, and the field now shows
"warehouseServerType" : nullso that's good that this detail is no longer leaked (for them) Commented Jan 26, 2022 at 7:39 -
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1@lightweight yes, that what the Jan 26th comment is saying. Commented Mar 15, 2022 at 7:49
There are no apparent publicly available specs for the WAREHOUSE building blocks, other that on AWS, the compute nodes are EC2 servers. Most likely an 8-thread CPU, 30-40 GB RAM (higher on Azure), and maybe around 250GB SSD. Something like m5d.2xlarge, but I'm only guessing.
Importantly, those figures stack up when increasing the WAREHOUSE size, making most storage bound queries running faster.