The problem I see with software raid is the issue of a battery backed unit: If the computer loses power, then the 'cache' which is held in system memory, goes away, and fubars your RAID.
Alex On 12/5/06, Michael Stone <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, Dec 05, 2006 at 01:21:38AM -0500, Alex Turner wrote: >My other and most important point is that I can't find any solid >recommendations for a SCSI card that can perform optimally in Linux or >*BSD. Off by a factor of 3x is pretty sad IMHO. (and yes, we know the >Adaptec cards suck worse, that doesn't bring us to a _good_ card). This gets back to my point about terminology. As a SCSI HBA the Adaptec is decent: I can sustain about 300MB/s off a single channel of the 39320A using an external RAID controller. As a RAID controller I can't even imagine using the Adaptec; I'm fairly certain they put that "functionality" on there just so they could charge more for the card. It may be that there's not much market for on-board SCSI RAID controllers; between SATA on the low end and SAS & FC on the high end, there isn't a whole lotta space left for SCSI. I definitely don't think much R&D is going into SCSI controllers any more, compared to other solutions like SATA or SAS RAID (the 39320 hasn't change in at least 3 years, IIRC). Anyway, since the Adaptec part is a decent SCSI controller and a lousy RAID controller, have you tried just using software RAID? Mike Stone ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: don't forget to increase your free space map settings