Hello Bob,
Friday, July 25, 2008, 9:00:41 PM, you wrote:
BF On Fri, 25 Jul 2008, Brandon High wrote:
I am not sure if ZFS really has to wait for both sides of a mirror to
finish, but even if it does, if there are enough VDEVs then ZFS can still
proceed with writing.
It would have to wait
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 1:02 PM, Matt Wreede [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Howdy.
My plan:
I'm planning an ESX-iSCSI target/NFS serving box.
I'm planning on using an Areca RAID card, as I've heard mixed things about
hot-swapping with Solaris/ZFS, and I'd like the stability of a hardware RAID.
James C. McPherson wrote:
Miles Nordin wrote:
bh == Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
bh a system built around the Marvell or LSI chipsets
according to The Blogosphere, source of all reliable information,
there's some issue with LSI, too. The driver is not available in
stable
to the Sun SAS HBA card ;)
-Andy
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of James C.
McPherson
Sent: Saturday, July 26, 2008 8:18 AM
To: Miles Nordin
Cc: zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org
Subject: Re: [zfs-discuss] Ideal Setup: RAID-5, Areca, etc!
Miles Nordin
Howdy.
My plan:
I'm planning an ESX-iSCSI target/NFS serving box.
I'm planning on using an Areca RAID card, as I've heard mixed things about
hot-swapping with Solaris/ZFS, and I'd like the stability of a hardware RAID.
My question is this: I'll be using 8 750GB SATA drives, and I''m trying to
But, is there a performance boost with mirroring the drives? That is what
I'm unsure of.
Mirroring will provide a boost on reads, since the system to read from
both sides of the mirror. It will not provide an increase on writes,
since the system needs to wait for both halves of the mirror
On Fri, 25 Jul 2008, Matt Wreede wrote:
Now, here is the important question: Does mirroring provide a
performance boost, or is it simply a way to provide redundancy? That
Mirroring provides a performance boost for reads since a read can be
done from either side of the mirror. Theoretically
On Fri, 25 Jul 2008, Brandon High wrote:
Mirroring will provide a boost on reads, since the system to read from
both sides of the mirror. It will not provide an increase on writes,
since the system needs to wait for both halves of the mirror to
finish. It could be slightly slower than a
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 11:44 AM, Wreede, Matt - PC/Network Technician
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've had hideous luck with software-RAID and hot swapping, and from what I've
heard, Solaris is sort of iffy on support for hot swapping, so I'd like to
stick with the Areca.
In theory, a system
On Fri, 25 Jul 2008, Brandon High wrote:
I am not sure if ZFS really has to wait for both sides of a mirror to
finish, but even if it does, if there are enough VDEVs then ZFS can still
proceed with writing.
It would have to wait on an fsync() call, since that won't return
until both halves
Bob Friesenhahn wrote:
On Fri, 25 Jul 2008, Brandon High wrote:
Mirroring will provide a boost on reads, since the system to read from
both sides of the mirror. It will not provide an increase on writes,
since the system needs to wait for both halves of the mirror to
finish. It could be
bh == Brandon High [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
bh a system built around the Marvell or LSI chipsets
according to The Blogosphere, source of all reliable information,
there's some issue with LSI, too. The driver is not available in
stable Solaris nor OpenSolaris, or there are two drivers, or
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 1:47 PM, Miles Nordin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
according to The Blogosphere, source of all reliable information,
there's some issue with LSI, too. The driver is not available in
stable Solaris nor OpenSolaris, or there are two drivers, or
something. the guy is so
Brandon High wrote:
All I know is that the x4540 uses the LSI 1068e chipset, and that the
X4500 used the Marvell 88SX chipset. Since buyers of both of these
systems probably have an expectation that they'll well, work, I assume
that the drivers in Solaris should be relatively stable.
If
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