On Sun, Jan 18, 2009 at 2:43 PM, Richard Elling <richard.ell...@sun.com>wrote:
> comment at the bottom... > DIY. Personally, I'd be more upset if ZFS reserved any sectors > for "some potential swap I might want to do later, but may never > need to do." If you want to reserve some space for swappage, DIY. > > As others have noted, this is not a problem for systems vendors > because we try, and usually succeed, at ensuring that our multiple > sources of disk drives are compatible such that we can swap one > for another. > -- richard > And again I call BS. I've pulled drives out of a USP-V, Clariion, DMX, and FAS3040. Every single one had drives of slightly differing sizes. Every single one is right-sized at format time. Hell, here's a filer I have sitting in a lab right now: RAID Disk Device HA SHELF BAY CHAN Pool Type RPM Used (MB/blks) Phys (MB/blks) --------- ------ ------------- ---- ---- ---- ----- -------------- -------------- dparity 0b.32 0b 2 0 FC:B - FCAL 10000 68000/139264000 68444/140174232 parity 0b.33 0b 2 1 FC:B - FCAL 10000 68000/139264000 68444/140174232 data 0b.34 0b 2 2 FC:B - FCAL 10000 68000/139264000 68552/140395088 Notice line's 2 and 3 are different physical block size, and those are BOTH seagate cheetah's, just different generation. So, it gets short stroked to 68000 from 68552 or 68444. And NO, the re-branded USP-V's Sun sell's don't do anything any differently, so stop lying, it's getting old. If you're so concerned with the storage *lying* or *hiding* space, I assume you're leading the charge at Sun to properly advertise drive sizes, right? Because the 1TB drive I can buy from Sun today is in no way, shape, or form able to store 1TB of data. You use the same *fuzzy math* the rest of the industry does. --Tim
_______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss