Dinesh Jadhav9867011640"Do not worry about anything; instead 
PRAY ABOUT EVERYTHING." 
Philippians 4:6

--- On Fri, 10/7/09, Sunil Naikwadi <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Sunil Naikwadi <[email protected]>
Subject: Software Vs Hardware RAID
To: [email protected], [email protected], "pravin thakur" 
<[email protected]>, "Raju Basutkar" <[email protected]>, "manisha 
arya" <[email protected]>, "Raju Arumugam" <[email protected]>, 
[email protected], [email protected], "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, 
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, 
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]>, "mario" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, 
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>, 
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "Redhat Certified Engineer" 
<[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>,
 "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, 
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Friday, 10 July, 2009, 1:11 AM


                                        SysAdmin
Software Vs Hardware RAID  


                                
                                


A redundant array of inexpensive disks (RAID) allows high levels of
storage reliability. RAID is not a backup solution. It is used to
improve disk I/O (performance) and reliability of your server or
workstation. A RAID can be deployed using both software and hardware.
But the real question is whether you should use a hardware RAID
solution or a software RAID solution. 
In this post I will document my experience with both software and hardware RAID.


Comparison: Hardware vs Software RAID


Feature
Software RAID
Hardware RAID


Cost:
Software RAID is part of OS, so no need to spend extract money.
Low
High


Complexity:
 The software RAID works
on partition level and it can sometime increase complexity if you mix
different partitions and hardware RAID.
Medium to high
Low


Write back caching (BBU): 
The
software RAID cannot add a battery. Hardware RAID can run in write-back
mode if it has a BBU installed. With BBU pending writes are not lost on
a power failure. 
No
Yes


Performance:
 With the software based
RAID0 and RAID1 performance is negligible. However, performance goes
down when you use parity-based arrays and/or several arrays at the same
time. The performance of a software-based array is dependent on the
server CPU performance and current load. 
Depend upon usage
High


Overheads (CPU, RAM etc): 
The
software RAID must use server's CPU and RAM for RAID software. The more
hard drives means more CPU cycle will go to software RAID instead of
your Apache / Postfix or MySQL server. 
Depend upon usage
No


Disk hot swapping:
 It means replacing hard disk without shutting down the server. Many RAID 
controller supports disk hot swapping.

No
Yes


Hot spare support: 
A hard disk is
physically installed in the array which stays inactive until an active
drive fails, when the system automatically replaces the failed drive
with the spare, rebuilding the array with the spare hard disk included.
Yes
Yes


/boot partition:  
It is hard to make
fail over with software RAID if /boot fails while booting the server.
This can result into unexpected errors and data loss. However, LILO and
FreeBSD loader can get around this problem too.

No
Yes


Open source factor:  
*BSD /
OpenSolaris and Linux RAID software drivers are open source. It means
more people can fix problems as compare to a closed source hardware
firmware. You can move, mix and match different sizes with open source
software RAID.

Yes
No


Vendor lock in (open formats): See above.

No
Yes


Higher write throughput:  
Hardware RAID with BBU may offers higher write throughput.

No
Yes


Faster rebuilds:  
Hardware RAID with BBU may offers faster rebuilds as compare to software based 
solution.

No
Yes


Can act as a backup solution?: 
 Both
software and hardware RAID cannot protect you against human errors or
system failures or viruses. Daily scheduled and off site backups of
your system are highly recommended. Use tools such as rsync, rsnapshot,
tar, dump, restore and others to make daily backups.
No
No


Recommend usage: 
 
+Low cost solution
+Better for RAID0 or RAID1
+Single server / workstation
+Perfect for home and small business users.
+No vendor lock-ins

+Do you run a mission critical cluster or setup?
+Heavy database driven dynamic site
+Do you want the highest performance possible?


Other Factors
Powerful Modern CPU
The performance of a software-based array is dependent on the server CPU 
performance and load. With today's faster CPUs, software RAID outperforms 
hardware RAID. 

Can RAID Array Fail?
Yes. The entire RAID array can fail taking down all your data (yes
hardware RAID card do dies). Use tapes and other servers that can hold
copies of the data, but don't allow much interaction with it. Move your
data offsite. Another option is to use two or three RAID cards. Combine
them together to protect your data. This make sure you gets back your
data when one of your RAID card dies out. 
Hardware vs Software Recovery
My personal experience - recovering from software RAID is easy.
However, sometime finding out exact hardware RAID requirements can be a
nightmare. A good backup can save from RAID hardware incompatibility
problems. Software RAID allows you to mix different drive and sizes.
You can not do something like this with hardware RAID cards. With
software RAID you can swap the drives to a different server and read
the data. There is no vendor lock in with software RAID solution. 
You Can Not Go Wrong With Hardware RAID
There is an old saying in IT -  no one ever got fired for picking RAID 
controllers. 
Use Both Hardware and Software RAID
Sometime you need to use both hardware and software RAID to get the
best of both worlds. For e.g. set up 4 mirror pairs, 2 on each hardware
RAID controller, and use software RAID0 to put it all together. This
will give the best performance for database server. Here is another
example from one of our DR site server (this box mirrors our 30+
production server files and database):
Server chassis with redundant power supplies Intel or AMD Dual Core CPU x 2 
16GB ECC RAM24 hot swappable drive bays2 x RAID PCIe / PCIx RAID hardware 
controller 4 x Intel 1000 PCIx Lan cards (bond them together) 
24 x 1TB SATA hard diskOS -  Pick - Linux / FreeBSD / OpenSolarisFilesystem - 
Pick - ZFS / UFS / Ext3 (we use RAID-Z)Backup software - rsync, rsnapshots and 
MySQL in slave mode.

Now you can configure RAID0 stripe across the three RAID6 arrays (8
x 24 disks) using both hardware and software solution together. This
massive storage system is perfect for online live backups. 
Conclusion
So which one is better software raid or hardware raid?
Short answer - None.
Long answer - It depends upon your setup and requirements. I
strongly recommend running both with benchmarking software to find out
your disk I/O. Test both solutions by removing hard disk i.e. fail a
few drives. Try running system while drives are failed. Note down
system load and errors (if any). Reboot the system. See if you can
boot. Can you see your data again? Are you comfortable using tools
provided with both solutions? See what works for you.
Finally, while choosing a storage always consider speed, reliability, and cost 
- pick any two.
A Final Note About My Personal Choice
I have been successfully using Linux and FreeBSD software RAID for
several years for backing up my own data. I prefer to use software RAID
to save money and to avoid vendor lock ins. All my personal data backup
using the following hardware:
1.5 TB USB hard disk - rsync and rsnapshot is used to make backup of all my 
servers and digitial camera.80GB x 3 hard disk software RAID using FreeNAS. 
Again, rsync is
used to make all backups. I'm planing to replace UFS with RAID-Z under
FreeBSD 8. 
RAID Alternatives
Local disks on MogileFS
storage nodes can be in a RAID, or not. It's cheaper not to, as RAID
doesn't buy you any safety that MogileFS doesn't already provide. This
is quite popular among the web 2.0 companies where lots of photos,
images and files are uploaded by their users. 
RAID-Z ZFS
Storage is a data/parity scheme like RAID-5, but it uses dynamic stripe
width. Every block is its own RAID-Z stripe, regardless of blocksize.
This means that every RAID-Z write is a full-stripe write. It doesn't
require any special hardware. 



-- 
Thanks & Regards
Sunil Naikwadi
9820668120

"Think positive in life always and look for opportunities when u can help 
Others."




      Looking for local information? Find it on Yahoo! Local 
http://in.local.yahoo.com/

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to