Some pretty typical numbers - a commercial diesel engine will run (at some loaded value) around twice the compression, and per unit volume maybe 4 times the moles of cylinder gas, and maybe 2.5 to 3 times the mass of fuel. The peak combustion pressures and temperatures are both much higher than a gasoline engine. Not as high as those numbers work out to in the raw math, because if you allowed that to happen you would break something, melt something, or produce prohibitive amounts of NOx. Therefore, among other things, you retard the fuel timing, introduce inert gases, and intercool the compressed air - largely to reduce the peak temperature. Around loaded values, diesels will exhibit a tendency for a flattened peak combustion temperature that is near the point where the NOx creation takes off.