Title: The Sys

Hi there

 

What are the thoughts about the Xiotech - Magnitude.

 

George

________________________________________________

George Leonard

Oracle Database Administrator

Dimension Data (Pty) Ltd

(Reg. No. 1987/006597/07)

Tel: (+27 11) 575 0573

Fax: (+27 11) 576 0573

E-mail:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Web:   http://www.didata.co.za

 

You Have The Obligation to Inform One Honestly of the risk, And As a Person

You Are Committed to Educate Yourself to the Total Risk In Any Activity!

Once Informed & Totally Aware of the Risk, Every Fool Has the Right to Kill or Injure Themselves as They See Fit!

-----Original Message-----
From: Babette Turner-Underwood [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent
: 11 November 2002 15:29 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Subject: RE: Oracle & SAN Experiences?

 

A client site that I was supporting a while ago had big problems with their NAS.

While doing Oracle backups to tape, the application would drop connections.

In a SAN environment, there might also be similar problems.

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of David Wagoner
Sent: Friday, November 08, 2002 9:59 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L
Subject: Oracle & SAN Experiences?

The Sys. Admin. team wants to consolidate storage (and probably get a new toy too) on all of our servers, so they are evaluating a SAN (LSI  Logic E4600).  The DBA team is doing some research to determine the pros and cons of doing this, and I'd like to hear any of your experiences (good and bad) using SAN with Oracle.

 

My understanding is that all of our database servers would remain intact, but the attached disk storage would move into the SAN.  So, we still have the Production, Test, and App. servers with their processors and memory, Oracle homes, etc.  The SAN will hold database files from Production, Test, Apps., staging, ODS,data warehouse, etc.

 

Their arguments:

-the SAN is very scalable (500 GB - 40 TB)

-easy to manage disks in one central location

-fancy statistics collection on all SAN disks

-much higher throughput on the fiber SAN connections than with locally attached disk arrays

-capable of using mixed RAID levels (0, 1, 1+0, 5, etc.)

-can partition sets of disks in the SAN for specific server access

-Snapshot backup capability is very fast in the SAN (much faster than traditional Oracle backups)

 

DBA arguments:

-How will this affect database performance?

-What are the drawbacks, if any, with the pre-fetch of data performed by the SAN (i.e., SAN cache)

-How tunable is the SAN

-Fast, small disks are better for performance and less wasted space than the typical huge disks in a SAN (it's possible to use smaller disks in the SAN)

-Prove it!

 

 

After reading the "Sane SAN" article and a case study about Volvo implementing a SAN, I believe it's possible to have a great Oracle/SAN implementation if it's setup correctly and tuned.  Other resources that you can Google are "Using SVA SnapShot with Oracle", "Performance Benchmark LSI Logic E4600 (STK D178)", "SAN Storage for Open Systems Environments", and of course check the OraFaq.

 

Thanks for sharing,

 

David Wagoner

Oracle DBA

 

 

 

 

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