Peter Peltonen
2017-Jan-20 17:31 UTC
[CentOS] CentOS 7 and Areca ARC-1883I SAS controller: JBOD or not to JBOD?
Hi, Does anyone have experiences about ARC-1883I SAS controller with CentOS7? I am planning to have RAID1 setup and I am wondering if I should use the controller's RAID functionality which has 2GB cache or should I go with JBOD + Linux software RAID? The disks I am going to use are 6TB Seagate Enterprise ST6000NM0034 7200rpm SAS/12Gbit 128 MB If hardware RAID is preferred, the controller's cache could be updated to 4GB and I wonder how much performance gain this would give me? Thanks! Peter
Nux!
2017-Jan-20 18:22 UTC
[CentOS] CentOS 7 and Areca ARC-1883I SAS controller: JBOD or not to JBOD?
Haven't used Areca in a very long time, but with raid controllers the rule is to use it in order to take advantage of the cache. The performance gains will be more than significant, especially for writes. hth -- Sent from the Delta quadrant using Borg technology! Nux! www.nux.ro ----- Original Message -----> From: "Peter Peltonen" <peter.peltonen at gmail.com> > To: "CentOS mailing list" <centos at centos.org> > Sent: Friday, 20 January, 2017 17:31:56 > Subject: [CentOS] CentOS 7 and Areca ARC-1883I SAS controller: JBOD or not to JBOD?> Hi, > > Does anyone have experiences about ARC-1883I SAS controller with CentOS7? > > I am planning to have RAID1 setup and I am wondering if I should use > the controller's RAID functionality which has 2GB cache or should I go > with JBOD + Linux software RAID? > > The disks I am going to use are 6TB Seagate Enterprise ST6000NM0034 > 7200rpm SAS/12Gbit 128 MB > > If hardware RAID is preferred, the controller's cache could be updated > to 4GB and I wonder how much performance gain this would give me? > > Thanks! > Peter > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Joseph L. Casale
2017-Jan-20 18:59 UTC
[CentOS] CentOS 7 and Areca ARC-1883I SAS controller: JBOD or not to JBOD?
> The disks I am going to use are 6TB Seagate Enterprise ST6000NM0034 > 7200rpm SAS/12Gbit 128 MBSorry to hear that, my experience is the Seagate brand has the shortest MTBF of any disk I have ever used...> If hardware RAID is preferred, the controller's cache could be updated > to 4GB and I wonder how much performance gain this would give me?Lots, especially with slower disks. You can also leverage write back caching if you have a battery on the controller as well. There are countless frameworks and one off utilities that can properly report on the throughput for various patterns, set it up both ways and know for sure. Not related to your question, but something to keep in mind: What type of enclosure are you using? If you are using an engineered system your enclosure will communicate with the controller. When a disk fails it's a pain in the arse to figure out where it exists physically. If you have an expander for example, this gets even more challenging. jlc
Valeri Galtsev
2017-Jan-20 19:14 UTC
[CentOS] CentOS 7 and Areca ARC-1883I SAS controller: JBOD or not to JBOD?
On Fri, January 20, 2017 12:59 pm, Joseph L. Casale wrote:>> The disks I am going to use are 6TB Seagate Enterprise ST6000NM0034 >> 7200rpm SAS/12Gbit 128 MB > > Sorry to hear that, my experience is the Seagate brand has the shortest > MTBF > of any disk I have ever used... > >> If hardware RAID is preferred, the controller's cache could be updated >> to 4GB and I wonder how much performance gain this would give me? > > Lots, especially with slower disks. You can also leverage write back > caching > if you have a battery on the controller as well. There are countless > frameworks > and one off utilities that can properly report on the throughput for > various > patterns, set it up both ways and know for sure. > > Not related to your question, but something to keep in mind: What type of > enclosure are you using? If you are using an engineered system your > enclosure > will communicate with the controller. When a disk fails it's a pain in the > arse > to figure out where it exists physically. If you have an expander for > example, > this gets even more challenging.This is why before configuring and installing everything you may want to attach drives one at a time, and upon boot take a note which physical drive number the controller has for that drive, and definitely label it so y9ou will know which drive to pull when drive failure is reported. Valeri> > jlc > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Valeri Galtsev Sr System Administrator Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics University of Chicago Phone: 773-702-4247 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
John R Pierce
2017-Jan-20 23:34 UTC
[CentOS] CentOS 7 and Areca ARC-1883I SAS controller: JBOD or not to JBOD?
On 1/20/2017 9:31 AM, Peter Peltonen wrote:> I am planning to have RAID1 setup and I am wondering if I should use > the controller's RAID functionality which has 2GB cache or should I go > with JBOD + Linux software RAID? > > The disks I am going to use are 6TB Seagate Enterprise ST6000NM0034 > 7200rpm SAS/12Gbit 128 MB > > If hardware RAID is preferred, the controller's cache could be updated > to 4GB and I wonder how much performance gain this would give me?if the controller's cache has battery or flash backed writeback protection, that should be in play whether you use it as jbod or "hardware" raid. you'll find the biggest performance boost will be on OLTP type database operations where many small insert/update transactions are being done.... but, those drives are more of a bulk storage sort of drive, suitable for things like backup data, media servers, rather than database... dedicated database servers generally use higher RPM drives or nowdays, enterprise-grade SSD. -- john r pierce, recycling bits in santa cruz
John R Pierce
2017-Jan-20 23:50 UTC
[CentOS] CentOS 7 and Areca ARC-1883I SAS controller: JBOD or not to JBOD?
On 1/20/2017 10:59 AM, Joseph L. Casale wrote:> Not related to your question, but something to keep in mind: What type of > enclosure are you using? If you are using an engineered system your enclosure > will communicate with the controller. When a disk fails it's a pain in the arse > to figure out where it exists physically. If you have an expander for example, > this gets even more challenging.this is my biggest gripe with roll your own 'whitebox' storage systems today... you get a brand name server, like HP or Dell, with HP or Dell storage, and when a drive fails, the failure light on that drive comes on bright RED, so there's no QUESTION what drive is offline and needs replacing.... whitebox raid or HBA card, with generic SAS expander trays, or whatever? good luck, implementing that failure mechanism is left as an exercise to the reader, without any clue how to go about it. -- john r pierce, recycling bits in santa cruz
Gordon Messmer
2017-Jan-21 00:03 UTC
[CentOS] CentOS 7 and Areca ARC-1883I SAS controller: JBOD or not to JBOD?
On 01/20/2017 09:31 AM, Peter Peltonen wrote:> I am planning to have RAID1 setup and I am wondering if I should use > the controller's RAID functionality which has 2GB cache or should I go > with JBOD + Linux software RAID?I'd recommend testing the specific application that will run on this system. It's not unusual for a system to preform well in simplistic benchmarks (like bonnie++), but not in real-world use. I recently conducted tests in which a MegaRAID controller handily outclassed software RAID under bonnie++, but fell short under better benchmarks provided by filebench: https://plus.google.com/+GordonMessmer/posts/eSe6iNmk1Fs?sfc=false
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