Thanks for the response Pranith
If we take EC out of the equation and say I go with RAID on the physical
disk, do you think GlusterFS is good for the 2 workloads that I mentioned
before.
Basically it is going to be a NFS storage for VM and data but with
different RAIDs, 10 for VM and 6 for data.
Thanks
Dev
On Tue, Jan 12, 2016 at 9:46 PM, Pranith Kumar Karampuri <
pkarampu at redhat.com> wrote:
>
>
> On 01/12/2016 01:26 PM, Pawan Devaiah wrote:
>
> Thanks for your response Pranith and Mathieu,
>
> Pranith: To answer your question, I am planning to use this storage for
> two main workloads.
>
> 1. As a shared storage for VMs.
>
> EC as it is today is not good for this.
>
> 2. As a NFS Storage for files.
>
> If the above is for storing archive data. EC is nice here.
>
> Pranith
>
>
> We are a online backup company so we store few hundred Terra bytes of data.
>
>
> Mathieu: I appreciate your concern, however as a system admins sometimes
> we get paranoid and try to control everything under the Sun.
> I know I can only control what I can.
>
> Having said that, No, I have pair of servers to start with so at the
> moment I am just evaluating and preparing for proof of concept, after which
> I am going to propose to my management, if they are happy then we will
> proceed further.
>
> Regards,
> Dev
>
> On Tue, Jan 12, 2016 at 7:30 PM, Mathieu Chateau <mathieu.chateau at
lotp.fr>
> wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> For any system, 36 disks raise disk failure probability. Do you plan
>> GlusterFS with only one server?
>>
>> You should think about failure at each level and be prepared for it:
>>
>> - Motherboard failure (full server down)
>> - Disks failure
>> - Network cable failure
>> - File system corruption (time needed for fsck)
>> - File/folder removed by mistake (backup)
>>
>> Using or not raid depend on your answer on these questions and
>> performance needed.
>> It also depend how "good" is raid controller in your server,
like if it
>> has battery and 1GB of cache.
>>
>> When many disks are bought at same time (1 order, serial number close
to
>> each other), they may fail in near time to each other (if something bad
>> happened in manufactory).
>> I already saw like 3 disks failing in few days.
>>
>> just my 2 cents,
>>
>>
>>
>> Cordialement,
>> Mathieu CHATEAU
>> http://www.lotp.fr
>>
>> 2016-01-12 4:36 GMT+01:00 Pranith Kumar Karampuri <pkarampu at
redhat.com>:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 01/12/2016 04:34 AM, Pawan Devaiah wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi All,
>>>
>>> We have a fairly powerful server sitting at office with 128 Gig RAM
and
>>> 36 X 4 TB drives. I am planning to utilize this server as a backend
storage
>>> with GlusterFS on it.
>>> I have been doing lot of reading on Glusterfs, but I do not see any
>>> definite recommendation on having RAID on GLUSTER nodes.
>>> Is it recommended to have RAID on GLUSTER nodes specially for the
bricks?
>>> If Yes, is it not contrary to the latest Erasure code implemented
in
>>> Gluster or is it still not ready for production environment?
>>> I am happy to implement RAID but my two main concern are
>>> 1. I want to make most of the disk space available.
>>> 2. I am also concerned about the rebuild time after disk failure on
the
>>> RAID.
>>>
>>> What is the workload you have?
>>>
>>> We found in our testing that random read/write workload with
Erasure
>>> coded volumes is not as good as we get with replication. There are
>>> enhancements in progress at the moment to address these things
which we are
>>> yet to merge and re-test.
>>>
>>> Pranith
>>>
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>> Dev
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Gluster-users mailing listGluster-users at
gluster.orghttp://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>> Gluster-users at gluster.org
>>> http://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
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