>
> The raid0 driver is 'clever' at all.
> It is given requests by the filesystem or mm subsystem, maps them to
> the correct device/sector, and sends them straight on to the
> appropriate driver. It never waits for requests, just maps and
> forwards.
>
> So if the filesystem sends 128 4k read-ahead requests to the raid0
> driver it will forward each one to the relevant device and, depending
> on chunk size etc, you might get, say, 32 4K requests sent to each of
> 4 drives. The drives would (depending on the internals of the driver)
> processes all these requests in parallel.
>
> In your example, if the filesystem or mm subsystem submitted writes
> for 4 consecutive chunks on a two-drive raid0 array without waiting
> for earlier ones to complete before submitting later ones, then they
> would all get to the device driver in a timely fashion, and the device
> driver(s) should be able to drive the two drives in parallel.
>
> So if the writer handles the required parallelism, and the devices
> handle the required parallelism, then the raid0 layer won't interfere
> at all.
> NeilBrown
Hi Neil
I am curious about that, too. In my memory, the IDE Channel can only
allow one IDE device read/write at once. If one driver(e.g. master)
was writing, the second driver (e.g. slave) must wait until the master
driver finished...
If you were right, can I plug the two disk into the same IDE channel in
raid 1 without losing any performance?
Asho Yeh
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