6 ноября 2015 г. 0:59:52 CET, Ian Collins <i...@ianshome.com> пишет:
>Rich Teer wrote:
>> On Thu, 5 Nov 2015, Jonathan Adams wrote:
>>
>>> USB is good for ZFS on Linux (useful to set the ashift on a
>backwards
>>> compatible Solaris 10 zpool), but it's not really "prime time".
>> Just so that I'm absolutely clear, would I be correct in thinking
>that
>> eSATA is preferred over USB-3, assuming SAS isn't an option?
>
>eSATA works with Illumos, USB3 isn't supported.

(Disclaimer: Maybe it is FUD that follows, but one I believe ATM)

Also, over its long history, USB was not well known for reliability. Everybody 
cut corners here and there - cables, plugs, shielding (or lack thereof), 
controllers, firmwares, drivers. Even given the spec, somebody did not invest 
in implementing say 1% of corner cases, somebody else missed another % and 
overall the big stack is spotty - with different misses and errors depending on 
components you take and mix. Overall - who cares if a consumerish mouse or 
webcam has a hiccup? Reinit the session and try again.

On the other hand, storage technologies are more demanding in reliability and 
speed. There are also consumerish examples of corners cut, but at least you 
know one can always build an enterprisish stack of hardware pieces that works 
up to spec, though maybe not with sand-cheapest bits on the market. 

I gather (maybe wrongly, but it is a venue to research or discuss) that a SAS 
controller with external ports can drive an external SATA disk tower as well, 
and would cost some 100-200 bucks (depending on port count, vendor, model) for 
an IT-mode oem lsi hba card widely known to work well.

Anyhow, I've heard of enterprise storage components. I have yet to hear of 
enterprise USB ;)

A few years somebody wrote on the list that relying on USB as a permanent 
connection to a disk array is an open invitation for accidents to happen. It 
may be okay for plug-and-disconnect backups to removable media, but not quite 
good for life-long connections where you expect reliability. (That said, my 
home router with TomatoUSB "firmware" OS has an USB HDD plugged in so we have a 
shared storage cache for unimportant stuff at home - but it does often get lost 
from online access, and we have to shake the cabling or reboot the box to get 
the disk available again). 
--
Typos courtesy of K-9 Mail on my Samsung Android

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