SSDs are not good if you write a lot on them - they are perfect however for mainly read only databases.
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RAID6 Vs RAID5 + HotSpare?
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And, in my experience in real life, only SCSI or FC-AL cuts the mustard in the enterprise, we sold some SATA storage to Uni of Wales in Aberystwyth and it was totaltoolip, IMHO nothing beats the sound of local SCSI (or FC-AL!) battering the disk, while the OS doesn't even't notice....Comment
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SATA storage is not the same - if you use "consumer" level SATA HDDs then they are often intentionally crippled by manufacturers to make "enterprise" users buy into their much more expensive "enterprise" disks: crippling is lack of quick timeout to recover from bad sectors, this may cause RAID card to think whole disk dropped out.Comment
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Can you move the RAID card to a different bus (slot) inside the server or are there no others choices ? and then re-test ? - not all buses have the same internal bandwidth in some servers.
Generally you should enable the Read Ahead caching, but the performance resulting from this is very dependent on the profile of the data, i.e are the files typically large or small, are they stored sequentially on the disk ? or very randomly ?
What type of data are you using for testing ? is this 'live' data from the original file server or is it test data that you have generated ?
Also are there any other settings on in the RAID card BIOS which may have an effect when fine tuning performance ?
Try to keep the data on the drives defragmented if possible in all cases.
A couple of other points...
I would stick with RAID 5, the read performance under optimal conditions should be better than RAID 1. RAID 1 is obviously very wastefull in terms of storage capacity.
Unless you really need the resilience provided by two parity disks stick with RAID 5. With RAID 6 you are increasing the overhead of having to write parity information to two disks, therefore slight slowing write performance.Last edited by omega; 1 February 2010, 10:58.Comment
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Just a small update on this….
Dell replaced the backplane to the disk array (was proven to be faulty) and now the RAID array seems to be performing OK.
I did some benchmark testing (passmark) on the array and found RAID6 to be slower on both read and write when compared to RAID5
Array now configured as RAID5 + 1 hotspare (6 disks in total) – performance is now OK.
272 Mb/s Read
309 Mb/s Write
The server is the main clients file and print server replacing an old IBM server which benchmarks at a very poor (RAID5)
60 Mb/s read
72 MB/s write
Lesson learned – Pick RAID5 + hot spare over RAID6www.stormtrack.co.uk - My Stormchasing website.Comment
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Originally posted by wxman View PostLesson learned – Pick RAID5 + hot spare over RAID6
Lesson: buy a card known to be able to handle RAID6 calculations...
HTHLast edited by AtW; 3 February 2010, 00:01.Comment
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Originally posted by AtW View PostRAID6 (apparently) involves much heavier CPU calculations than previous RAIDs, which means a lot of early cards that kind of supported it did not have enough CPU power to handle calculations with adequate speed.
Lesson: buy a card known to be able to handle RAID6 calculations...
HTH
RAID5 seems to gives better R/W throughput over RAID6 and the hotspare means that the array needs to fail three disks before it falls over (assuming that the hot spare takes over)www.stormtrack.co.uk - My Stormchasing website.Comment
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Originally posted by wxman View PostBut what if any advantages are there running RAID6 over a RAID5 + hot spare?
I think there are some advantages, personally I was attracted to the fact that on 2U box with 4 disks put into RAID6 it was ok for us to lose 2 of them.Comment
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Originally posted by wxman View PostBut what if any advantages are there running RAID6 over a RAID5 + hot spare?
RAID5 seems to gives better R/W throughput over RAID6 and the hotspare means that the array needs to fail three disks before it falls over (assuming that the hot spare takes over)
You might also want to think about how performance degrades after a drive failure & during the subsequent rebuild.While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'Comment
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Originally posted by stek View PostThink I would have gone for simple mirror, cron'd detach, backup the detached mirror, reattach if only a file/print, raid 5 really is for slow writes, fast reads for most DB's and LDAP in my view - not file and print. (assuming Unix-based OS for cron etc)
I might be biased but I'd always go Sun/IBM/HP for this sort of thing, I've seen Dell fall over spectacularly before, more with SAN's but still an über-fük....
Sun etc, really, one throat to choke, my mantra never let me down. Dell are for PC's and lappies...
And u can ring Sun Support 24/7..."A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims, but accomplices," George OrwellComment
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