You could always use 40-gigabit between the two storage systems which would speed things dramatically, or back to back 56-gigabit IB.
---------------------------------------- From: zfs-discuss-requ...@opensolaris.org Sent: Monday, March 18, 2013 11:01 PM To: zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org Subject: zfs-discuss Digest, Vol 89, Issue 12 Send zfs-discuss mailing list submissions to zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to zfs-discuss-requ...@opensolaris.org You can reach the person managing the list at zfs-discuss-ow...@opensolaris.org When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of zfs-discuss digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Re: [zfs] Re: Petabyte pool? (Richard Yao) 2. Re: [zfs] Re: Petabyte pool? (Trey Palmer) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Sat, 16 Mar 2013 08:23:07 -0400 From: Richard Yao <r...@gentoo.org> To: z...@lists.illumos.org Cc: zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org Subject: Re: [zfs-discuss] [zfs] Re: Petabyte pool? Message-ID: <5144642b.1030...@gentoo.org> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" On 03/16/2013 12:57 AM, Richard Elling wrote: > On Mar 15, 2013, at 6:09 PM, Marion Hakanson <hakan...@ohsu.edu> wrote: >> So, has anyone done this? Or come close to it? Thoughts, even if you >> haven't done it yourself? > > Don't forget about backups :-) > -- richard Transferring 1 PB over a 10 gigabit link will take at least 10 days when overhead is taken into account. The backup system should have a dedicated 10 gigabit link at the minimum and using incremental send/recv will be extremely important. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 901 bytes Desc: OpenPGP digital signature URL: <http://mail.opensolaris.org/pipermail/zfs-discuss/attachments/20130316/de90 7dfe/attachment-0001.bin> ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Sat, 16 Mar 2013 01:30:41 -0400 (EDT) From: Trey Palmer <t...@nerdmagic.com> To: "z...@lists.illumos.org" <z...@lists.illumos.org> Cc: "z...@lists.illumos.org" <z...@lists.illumos.org>, "zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org" <zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org> Subject: Re: [zfs-discuss] [zfs] Re: Petabyte pool? Message-ID: <1ce7bf11-6e42-421e-b136-14c0d557d...@nerdmagic.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii I know it's heresy these days, but given the I/O throughput you're looking for and the amount you're going to spend on disks, a T5-2 could make sense when they're released (I think) later this month. Crucial sells RAM they guarantee for use in SPARC T-series, and since you're at an edu the academic discount is 35%. So A T4-2 with 512GB RAM could be had for under $35K shortly after release, 4-5 months before the E5 Xeon was released. It seemed a surprisingly good deal to me. The T5-2 has 32x3.6GHz cores, 256 threads and ~150GB/s aggregate memory bandwidth. In my testing a T4-1 can compete with a 12-core E-5 box on I/O and memory bandwidth, and this thing is about 5 times bigger than the T4-1. It should have at least 10 PCIe's and will take 32 DIMMs minimum, maybe 64. And is likely to cost you less than $50K with aftermarket RAM. -- Trey On Mar 15, 2013, at 10:35 PM, Marion Hakanson <hakan...@ohsu.edu> wrote: >>> Ray said: >>>> Using a Dell R720 head unit, plus a bunch of Dell MD1200 JBODs dual pathed >>>> to a couple of LSI SAS switches. >> Marion said: >>> How many HBA's in the R720? > Ray said: >> We have qty 2 LSI SAS 9201-16e HBA's (Dell resold[1]). > > Sounds similar in approach to the Aberdeen product another sender referred to, > with SAS switch layout: > http://www.aberdeeninc.com/images/1-up-petarack2.jpg > > One concern I had is that I compared our SuperMicro JBOD with 40x 4TB drives > in it, connected via a dual-port LSI SAS 9200-8e HBA, to the same pool layout > on a 40-slot server with 40x SATA drives in it. But the server uses n > expanders, instead using SAS-to-SATA octopus cables to connect the drives > directly to three internal SAS HBA's (2x 9201-16i's, 1x 9211-8i). > > What I found was that the internal pool was significantly faster for both > sequential and random I/O than the pool on the external JBOD. > > My conclusion was that I would not want to exceed ~48 drives on a single > 8-port SAS HBA. So I thought that running the I/O of all your hundreds > of drives through only two HBA's would be a bottleneck. > > LSI's specs say 4800MBytes/sec for an 8-port SAS HBA, but 4000MBytes/sec > for that card in an x8 PCIe-2.0 slot. Sure, the newer 9207-8e is rated > at 8000MBytes/sec in an x8 PCIe-3.0 slot, but it still has only the same > 8 SAS ports going at 4800MBytes/sec. > > Yes, I know the disks probably can't go that fast. But in my tests > above, the internal 40-disk pool measures 2000MBytes/sec sequential > reads and writes, while the external 40-disk JBOD measures at 1500 > to 1700 MBytes/sec. Not a lot slower, but significantly slower, so > I do think the number of HBA's makes a difference. > > At the moment, I'm leaning toward piling six, eight, or ten HBA's into > a server, preferably one with dual IOH's (thus two PCIe busses), and > connecting dual-path JBOD's in that manner. > > I hadn't looked into SAS switches much, but they do look more reliable > than daisy-chaining a bunch of JBOD's together. I just haven't seen > how to get more bandwidth through them to a single host. > > Regards, > > Marion > > > > > ------------------------------------------- > illumos-zfs > Archives: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/182191/=now > RSS Feed: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/rss/182191/22500336-78e51065 > Modify Your Subscription: https://www.listbox.com/member/?member_id=22500336&id_secret=22500336-0da179 77 > Powered by Listbox: http://www.listbox.com ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss End of zfs-discuss Digest, Vol 89, Issue 12 *******************************************
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