On Aug 11, 2017, at 11:52 AM, hw <h...@gc-24.de> wrote:
> 
> Software RAID with mdadm is a bad idea because
> it comes with quite some performance loss.

That sounds like outdated information, from the time before CPUs were fast 
enough to do parity RAID calculations with insignificant overhead.

> ZFS is troublesome because it´s not
> as well integrated as we can wish for, booting from a ZFS volume gives you 
> even
> more trouble

Those are both solvable problems, involving less resources than Fedora/Red Hat 
are throwing at Stratis.  Therefore, we can infer that they don’t *want* to 
solve those problems.

> it is rather noticeable that ZFS wasn´t designed with
> performance in mind.

You don’t get the vastly superior filesystem durability ZFS offers without a 
performance hit.  Any competing filesystem that comes along and offers the same 
features will have the same hit.

If you want burnin’ speed at all costs, use ext4.

> That doesn´t even mention features like checksumming

That is intended to be in Stratis, but not until 3.0, which is not yet even 
scheduled.

This is part of what I meant by my speculation in a prior post that Stratis 
won’t be ready for prime time until EL9.  Plan accordingly.

> deduplication, compression

Also Stratis 3.0.

> and the creation of subvolumes (or their equivalent)

That should be possible with the earliest testable versions of Stratis, as LVM2 
provides this today:

    https://goo.gl/2U4Uio

> It also doesn´t mention
> that LVM is a catastrophy.

I will grant that it’s an utter mess to manage by hand with the current tools.  
Fixing that is one of the primary goals of the Stratis project.

Complaining about it on the CentOS list is not the right way to fix it.  If you 
want Stratis to not suck, they’re targeting the first releases of it for Fedora 
28.  

There’s also the GitHub issue tracker.  Let them know what you want Stratis to 
be; the Stratis developers are not likely to schedule features “properly” if 
they misunderstand which ones matter most to you.

> I could use hardware RAID

My sense is that the Linux-first hardware RAID card market is shrinking and 
maybe even dying.

With 10-dumb-SATA motherboards readily available, I think it’s time for 
hardware RAID to die in Linux, too, if only in the workstation and low-end 
server segment, where 10-ish drives is enough.

> So far, it´s working fine, but I´d rather switch now than experience
> desaster.

One of your options is to take advantage of the fact that CentOS major releases 
overlap in support: EL7 will still be supported when EL9 comes out.  All of 
this should be greatly clarified by then.
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