RAID5 for Linux
Rich Braun
richb at pioneer.ci.net
Wed Apr 28 15:44:23 EDT 2004
Bob Keyes wrote:
> Now that the reason for the number of drives was explained to me, it makes
> sense. I may be able to use software RAID on a low-end system after all.
> But for some reason, SCSI doesn't have a lot of respect around this
> office.
Just to be clear: I am not recommending that you consider SCSI; I am
recommending taking a look at (parallel) IDE vs. serial ATA, and at software
vs. hardware RAID.
The price premium for SCSI is rarely worth it, only in high-end systems built
with it. Or in obsolescent systems that you inherited from someone else.
(But don't use hard drives older than about 5 years, when manufacturers
finally figured out how to make them truly durable.)
You can easily build a 4-drive IDE configuration with software RAID1, 600 gigs
usable, by getting the cheapest 300Gb drives on the market. A RAID5
configuration would give you 900 gigs using the same 4 300Gb drives.
I don't know too many environments where you really need that much data. One
other comment I should make about a typical corporate installation: high
capacity filesystems make people lazy about cleaning out old data. Most
companies should throw out 99% of the junk they've accumulated. But they
don't bother because hard drives are cheap.
But if folks don't clean out the crap, there is a cost to consider: backups.
Tape drives are nowhere near as cheap as disks, and handling large backup
libraries is a time-consuming administrative hassle.
-rich
More information about the Discuss
mailing list