Ross S. W. Walker
2008-Mar-14 13:34 UTC
Re: [CentOS] Recommendations for a “real RAID" 1 card on Centos box
This is getting OT and you are going to end up spending more on redundancy then if you just called Dell and ordered another computer. ----- Original Message ----- From: centos-bounces at centos.org <centos-bounces at centos.org> To: CentOS mailing list <centos at centos.org> Sent: Fri Mar 14 09:31:00 2008 Subject: RE: [CentOS] Recommendations for a ?real RAID" 1 card on Centos box> That is true, buy high quality stuff up front for fewer problems down > the road. Not a sure bet, but a better one. In the half dozen systems > I've been running at home for the past several years none of them > have suffered a hardware failure of any kind(fortunately). I've been > running PC Power and Cooling power supplies for about 9 years now, > really high quality PSUs(last one I bought was about 4 years ago, can't > speak for their quality now).So for a top quality power supply for a mission critical desktop machine, which brand(s) would you reccomend? One of the towers I have is a Thermaltake Xaser 3 with lots of room, and I just bought a new Antec Sonata III tower with a 500 watt PS.> So BBU is certainly a nice thing to have but at least in my > experience isn't absolutely critical.Then for a Mission critical desktop machine, if you had to make a choice, would you go with a good quality UPS and/or redundant power supplies, or a BBU instead?> Of course for absolutely critical things I don't use server-based > RAID anyways. Multiple redundant controllers, multiple redundant > paths(to both the disks and to the hosts), is the way to go(assuming > your application(s) aren't built to be able to run on something > like a distributed file system). I've seen that some of the > latest HP servers have dual ported SAS disks, which sounds pretty > neat. I assume they still only have one controller though.As an alternative to RAID1 for a mission critical desktop machine @ home, what would you reccomend? Maybe a bare metal restore solution able to restore to different hardware, (i.e. if a motherboard dies and drive crashes due to power spike or some catastrophe, I'm screwed if I can't find the exact same make - model)? _________________________________________________________________ Connect and share in new ways with Windows Live. http://www.windowslive.com/share.html?ocid=TXT_TAGHM_Wave2_sharelife_012008_______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS at centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos ______________________________________________________________________ This e-mail, and any attachments thereto, is intended only for use by the addressee(s) named herein and may contain legally privileged and/or confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient of this e-mail, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this e-mail, and any attachments thereto, is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please immediately notify the sender and permanently delete the original and any copy or printout thereof. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20080314/50e51a9d/attachment-0002.html>
Therese Trudeau
2008-Mar-14 14:07 UTC
RE: [CentOS] Recommendations for a “real RAID" 1 card on Centos box
> This is getting OT and you are going to end up spending more on redundancy then if you just called Dell and ordered another computer.I agree with you in that it's cheaper to buy another home computer than to design a system with redundancy. However that new conputer I would order from Dell probabally would not have the redundancy I need in a a workstation, and I would just end up back where I started anyway. _________________________________________________________________ Helping your favorite cause is as easy as instant messaging.?You IM, we give. http://im.live.com/Messenger/IM/Home/?source=text_hotmail_join