RAID6? (was Re: Anyone Actually Using Virtual Linux Servers?)
Derek Atkins
warlord-DPNOqEs/LNQ at public.gmane.org
Tue Sep 11 12:37:03 EDT 2007
Jarod Wilson <jarod-ajLrJawYSntWk0Htik3J/w at public.gmane.org> writes:
> Yes, it requires at least 4 disks instead of 3 disks like RAID5, and your
> capacity is number of drives minus two. With RAID5, in the 3-disk case, you
> have two data stripes and one parity stripe for every write. With RAID6 in
> the 4-disk case, you have two data stripes and two parity stripes for every
> write. With that in place, RAID6 can survive a double-disk failure of any two
> disks in the array, whereas with RAID10, certain double-disk failures can
> still be fatal (and of course in RAID5, they're always fatal).
Yeah, I read that much on wikipedia..
> Personally, I moved from RAID5 to RAID6 after getting bit by a second disk
> going haywire while a RAID5 array was being rebuilt after replacing a disk
> that had failed. Went RAID6 over RAID10 primarily since it should survive
> failing any two disks, and in cursory testing, the throughput was still more
> than adequate (some have complained about the computational intensity of
> RAID6, but with a modern multi-core cpu, *shrug*).
Fair enough.. For me I'm pondering this for the case of an 8-core
vmware host server.
>> ISTR a problem in that with RAID5 if
>> you had a partial disk failure (i.e. it just returned bogus data) that
>> you could corrupt your data because Linux S/W RAID didn't do checksum
>> verification on reads -- so it was "safer" to use RAID10. Is this
>> "fixed" in raid6?
>
> Hrm. I wasn't aware of any such issue, so I haven't a clue if its fixed or
> not...
IIRC: http://www.miracleas.com/BAARF/RAID5_versus_RAID10.txt
> Jarod Wilson
> jarod-ajLrJawYSntWk0Htik3J/w at public.gmane.org
-derek
--
Derek Atkins, SB '93 MIT EE, SM '95 MIT Media Laboratory
Member, MIT Student Information Processing Board (SIPB)
URL: http://web.mit.edu/warlord/ PP-ASEL-IA N1NWH
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