Boston Linux and Unix InstallFest XXXII Saturday February 28, 2009
Ben Eisenbraun
bene-Gk2boCrsRs1AfugRpC6u6w at public.gmane.org
Mon Feb 23 16:53:03 EST 2009
On Mon, Feb 23, 2009 at 04:28:12PM -0500, Jerry Natowitz wrote:
> A year or two ago Google published results of a big study they did on
> disk reliability. I don't remember much about it, except that they
> found that RAIDs are usually built using disks from the same
> manufacturing lot, and that failure modes are often quite similar for
> disks from a particular lot. This results in a higher probability than
> expected that a disk failure will involve multiple drives.
>
> I read this to mean that RAID 6 or RAID 1+0 (sometimes called 10), or
> possibly 5+0 should be used rather than RAID 5.
Robin Harris from ZDNet/Storage Mojo had a few posts on the Google paper
and RAID 5 in general:
Google's Disk Failure Experience
http://storagemojo.com/2007/02/19/googles-disk-failure-experience/
Why RAID 5 stops working in 2009
http://blogs.zdnet.com/storage/?p=162
NetApp Weighs In On Disks
http://storagemojo.com/2007/02/26/netapp-weighs-in-on-disks/
Which has this nice incendiary line:
"RAID 5 today verges on professional malpractice"
Fun stuff.
-b
--
irrationality is the square root of all evil. <douglas hofstadter>
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