Wow good explanation here. I will try to answer some of the interogation

 

1-       The os I think to use is Ubuntu (gutsy) serveur edition

2-       The expansion card that I have is a PERC/II that I think I a raid
controller. I have 4 channel on it. I use 3 of them

 

If I understand my raid card correctly, I don’t think I will be able to do a
16Hdd array since thay are not on the same channel. But I could be wrong on
that. This is nearly the first time I play with hardware raid. I use
software raid on linux for mirroring. 

 

I have 1 gig of ram on the server. 

 

The array setup is as follow

 

1 array of 2 hdd

1 array of 6 hdd

1 array of 10 hdd

 

Jonathan

 

 

 

 

 

  _____  

De : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] De la part de dan
Envoyé : 4 février 2008 22:15
À : Justin Best
Cc : backuppc-users
Objet : Re: [BackupPC-users] Information needed

 

My suggestion is:
for OS
2 disks, RAID1 which is a mirror.  likely you will have no use for high
performance here, all the work will be done on the other array(s)

for samba.  have you considered putting all 16 drives into 1 array, a RAID6+
hot spare?  RAID6 being a RAID with 2 redundant disks.  I say this because
you will likely be doing backups at night and samba sharing during the day
so you will get better performance and more flexible file storage.  on top
of the larger array you would then run LVM. 

On top of the larger 16 drive RAID6+HS you would then run LVM, and you could
seperate out the volumes to your liking.  this would give you roughly 500GB
unformatted with a redundancy.  

As for filesystem, I would recommend EITHER ext3 as it is so standard, and
very reliable, OR XFS.  XFS is a very good filesystem that is very LVM
friendly and can be grown without unmounting.  It is also very good and very
fast at making and deleting files and hardlinks which is what backuppc uses.
XFS *CAN* be significantly faster than ext3 for backuppc.  I personally have
XFS on 1 backuppc server and ext3 on another.  they are both exceptional.

you did not mention the OS you will run here, I assumed linux.  you do have
some very very good choices in a linux, freebsd, or nexenta/opensolaris.  I
run linux servers for production but am testing a freebsd and a nexenta
server specifically for network performance and the ZFS filesystem.  freebsd
and nexenta both have a faster network stack than linux which i have notice
but only slightly(2-5% or so??).  ZFS is pretty awesome though.  its like
software RAID + LVM + a 6 pack or Red Bull.  they both also have the classic
unix filesystem UFS which is pretty good.  you could compare its performance
and reliability to ext3, though they are not very similar under the hood.

also, you didn't mention if you were using a hardware raid card or just a
scsi card.  if you need to run softraid, then and OS is suitable.  if you
choose linux, you can use the md system and have a pretty fast softraid
though it will likely consume one of those processor when you hit the disk
hard.  if you go with nexenta or freebsd, you will use ZFS **BUT** you will
need to have 1+ GB RAM.  ZFS uses a lot of RAM, especially if you use
filesystem level compression(a nice bennefit, you can turn off compression
in backuppc and let the filesystem do the work, compressed ZFS is faster
than backuppc's compression although it will tax a CPU pretty hard.  ZFS is
multithreaded though while backuppc's compression is not, so you would
likely see faster compression with ZFS with 4 CPUs doing the work, but you
probably only have 1 PCI bus which means that you will have a hard limit of
about 66MB/s due to the 132MB/s PCI bus.

hope i could help..



On Feb 4, 2008 3:40 PM, Justin Best <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> BackupPC uses *hardlinks* for pooling.
>

DOH! You are so right.

Being mainly a Windows admin, I don't think I ever was completely
clear on the difference between hardlinks and symlinks until a few
minutes ago, when I looked it up. For anyone else who is confused on
hardlinks vs softlinks, I would recommend the following page:

http://linuxgazette.net/105/pitcher.html



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