> well, my experiences with distcc has not been quite nice, some of the 
> 
> packages does not behave well with distributed compiling... or what 
> did 
> you mean with buildsystem? and searching from portage over nfs is much 
> 
> slower than searching local portage tree...

As someone else said esearch, eix are very nice tools that work best for 
searching even when you have a local portage tree.  

What I actually meant by build system is to only build packages on one machine 
and let your other hosts use those binary packages rather than trying to build 
and compile everywhere.  If you want you can use distcc on top of that but it's 
not necessary.  This was more so in relation to your home networking proposal.  
It results in a single build environment so all of your machines that use those 
packages behave the same and there's only one machine doing portage tree 
syncing which means less disk trashing and (external) network traffic.  In my 
experience it ends up performing much better and being easier to manage.  Then 
you can dedicate your other machines to their actual purposes rather than 
trying to fix build problems in many different places.

As to your original question, again, it depends on what you're doing.  RAID0 is 
best for fast writes in which you don't care about reliability - basically 
scratch space.  Something like portage might be suited for this.  Then again, 
the portage tree is really meant as a local cache of the master tree.  As such 
its supposed to be read from more often than written to.  RAID1 provides 
reliability and read performance since you can read from one of several disks 
to achieve the same results.  Write performance for RAID1 is obviously not as 
good, but how often are you really writing to /opt or /usr for instance.  If 
you're going software raid, both of these come almost free in terms of overhead 
involved.  With higher levels you'll definitely want true hardware level raid, 
not some cheap BIOS implemented version.  I'd previously read, and can't find 
the document just now, that RAID10 offers the combination of both of these and 
the best performance (better than RAID5 as well).  Thou
gh that may be out of the question in terms of the number of disks involved.

Here's what I've done in the past for client machines...

Partition1 RAID1 15G /
Partition2 1xRAM/disk swap (it should automatically be striped)
Partition3 RAID0 5G /tmp (you may want more if you're doing video editing or 
something like that)
Partition4 (extended)
Partition5 RAID1 5G /var (you may want more if you're building packages or 
something)
Partition6 RAID1 * /home (the rest of it)

Also, if you want to be able to tweak your partition sizes, LVM offers striping 
and mirroring so you don't need to layer software raid on top of or underneath 
that as well.

Hope that helps,
Brian
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