On Saturday 26 June 2004 00:45, Sanjeev "Ghane" Gupta wrote: > > I assume this is 8 x 36GB SCSI. LC? LW? Part number, please? >
My mistake, it is 36 GB x 8 SCSI U320 10K HP, Part no 286713-B22 > I would suggest, if you have the cash, RHEL. This will work great for > Oracle. Guaranteed. If your database is really important to your company, > this is good value for the money. You get really great support. Ok, but which one? Redhat Enterprise Linux - AS (upto 16 CPUs & 64 GB Main memory) OR Redhat Enterprise Linux ES (upto 2 CPU & 8GB Main memory) I think we should get RHEL-AS ? recalling 4CPUs xenon 2.2 Ghz we have. > > Else, either Whitebox http://whiteboxlinux.org/ if you would like to stick > to Red Hat, or Debian http://www.debian.org Any success stories?, package updates ... > > Everyone is "performance hungry", for various value of "performance". What > do you really need? Performance in terms of speed, or reliability? > > Firstly, apart from RAID 0, any other RAID MUST (I mean MUST) be: > implemented purely (yes, purely) in hardware > have a large RAM cache (512M? at least 256M) > have a battery backup, on the "RAID card", at least 96 hours (think: > long weekend) > Anything else is at best useless, at worst snake oil. It is HP 6400 array controller with 192 MB cache. I have the smart start CDs But when i choose Linux as the OS(other options are windows 2000, windows 2003, Novel,OS/2, SCO etc) in ROM Based Setup Utility (RBSU) and then boots from smart start CD 7.0 it says :- "OS selected is not supported for assisted installation using smart start..." :( How do i configure array of hard disk for RAID?. I have hardware card for RAID system. let me check its no.. Give one try to install Redhat 8.0 & FC2 WITHOUT setting up any RAID is fine! > > Next, if you can lay your databases/indices decently, the bulk of your work > is done. A good DBA will out-perform a team of Sys Adms any day in > database performance. > > How IO intensive is your app anyway? If really high, go to 15k drives, > U320 (although U160 are not much worse). This is a quick win. Look for > 8MB caches, on-drive. Buy good SCSI cables. The fastes way to improve HDD > IO, in my view, is to stick in few G of RAM into the box. Amazing what > caching will do. > > Split your drives into 3 groups: > A RAID 5 set, or RAID 10, for your data > A RAID 1 set, for the OS + App > A normal disk, for swap + /tmp (who cares if you lose this?) This is attracting setup well, will give it one try... > > bonnie++ is your friend. http://www.coker.com.au/bonnie++/ > > And for RAID any higher than 1, you need a storage array. You cannot just > pop-in disks into your cabinet and leave it at that, read up on "spindle > synchronization" if you want to do RAID 3. The drives you have may not > support this. Regards, Yash > > If you do realise you need faster drives, you know who to call :-) > > -- > Sanjeev "ghane" Gupta > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.Net email sponsored by Black Hat Briefings & Training. > Attend Black Hat Briefings & Training, Las Vegas July 24-29 - > digital self defense, top technical experts, no vendor pitches, > unmatched networking opportunities. Visit www.blackhat.com > _______________________________________________ > linux-india-help mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-india-help ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email sponsored by Black Hat Briefings & Training. Attend Black Hat Briefings & Training, Las Vegas July 24-29 - digital self defense, top technical experts, no vendor pitches, unmatched networking opportunities. Visit www.blackhat.com _______________________________________________ linux-india-help mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-india-help
