I intend to replace fading SCSI drive by a SATA one. The motherboard is PCI and no SATA controller on board. So I need a SATA/PCI controller. Is there something wrong to do this kind of switch? Some told me that I won't be able to boot that drive. Loosing part of the SATA interface speed is not a decisive factor on this machine Is there are some prefered Linux SATA controller? Need experienced feedbacks. --- Michel Donais -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20110308/b01c2646/attachment-0002.html>
On Tue, Mar 8, 2011 at 11:20 PM, Michel Donais <donais at telupton.com> wrote:> I intend to replace fading SCSI drive by a SATA one. > The motherboard is PCI and no SATA controller on board. > So I need a SATA/PCI ?controller. > > Is there something wrong to do this kind of switch? > Some told me that I won't be able to boot that drive. > Loosing part of the SATA interface speed is not a decisive factor on this > machine > Is there are ?some prefered Linux SATA controller? > > Need experienced feedbacks.This is *not* a CentOS specific question. But some of us have been there. I'm going to urge you to, instead of replacing anything, backup your SCSI drive to an external or separate NFS repository,and do a clean rebuild on a new SATA drive. The Adaptec 2140 series of controllers are pretty good and pretty well Linux supported, and pretty cheap. If that's not feasible, talk to us. It'll take some fascinating configuration changes to mirror things, but gods know I've done that.
On 03/08/11 8:20 PM, Michel Donais wrote:> I intend to replace fading SCSI drive by a SATA one. > The motherboard is PCI and no SATA controller on board. > So I need a SATA/PCI controller. > Is there something wrong to do this kind of switch? > Some told me that I won't be able to boot that drive. > Loosing part of the SATA interface speed is not a decisive factor on > this machine > Is there are some prefered Linux SATA controller? >oldschool desktop 32bit 33Mhz parallel PCI will be a performance bottleneck for more than 1 SATA drive. Is your server PCI 32bit, PCI 64bit, or PCI-X (64bit, 100-133Mhz), or is it PCI-Express and if so does it have x4 or faster slots? As someone else said, a SATA card likely will NOT be bootable, unless it has a boot eeprom on it, and these cost more.