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    Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @Alex Sage
      last edited by

      @aaronstuder said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

      @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

      Dell will often reject consumer drives. Or any non-Dell drives.

      What? What do you mean reject them? They will complain, but the drives work just fine... At least everything I have tested.

      Depends on the drives and the controller. Often it won't work, sometimes it just partially works.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @dave247
        last edited by

        @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

        @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

        @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

        @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

        @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

        @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

        @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

        My thinking is that I'd like the OS partition to be fast as possible, because why not.

        Couple terminology pieces...

        Your HV is what runs the system, not the OS. Hyper-V is an HV, Windows is an OS. Your OSes are in your VMs and will go on the big RAID array. Your HV alone, which is tiny and has no performance needs, is what will go on the SSD array.

        They are not partitions, they are arrays. Partitions are a completely different, but very specific, concept.

        Sorry, when I say OS in this case, I mean Hyper-V. I'm installing the bare-metal Windows Hyper-V 2016 hypervisor.

        Right, Hyper-V is not an OS. Avoid that term.

        Also there is more confusion about the product. Let's break this down.

        Hyper-V is the Type 1 hypervisor, that means it is always bare metal. Never use the term "bare metal" with Hyper-V, because that is implied. It's redundant, but implies that you are confused and think that there is another option.

        I just wanted to make it clear that I wasn't talking about the Hyper-V role in Windows.

        Right, but that doesn't imply that in any way. But calling your install Windows Hyper-V, instead of Hyper-V, implied that you were doing the role. Because the role is every bit as bare metal as the normal install, saying bare metal doesn't mean anything at all. But including the word Windows would mean a lot.

        How is installing the Windows Hyper-V role on a Windows Server installation the same as installing the hypervisor? I thought that installing the role was worse than just installing the hypervisor since it's kinda sitting on top of the Windows Server OS and adds overhead or something.

        It's worse, because of licensing binding, and because it installs Windows bloat on top of Hyper-V. But it doesn't alter Hyper-V itself in any way.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • dave247D
          dave247 @scottalanmiller
          last edited by

          @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

          @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

          Maybe I should see if I can install Hyper-V on an SD card.. I have an iDRAC with the card slot

          No, don't do that. MS used to semi-support that long ago. Now they do not at all.

          k then.. I guess I'll just leave the single SSD in and finish installing it to that. I started the install process to one Intel SSD then paused to come post my questions here.

          DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • DashrenderD
            Dashrender @Alex Sage
            last edited by

            @aaronstuder said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

            @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

            Dell will often reject consumer drives. Or any non-Dell drives.

            What? What do you mean reject them? They will complain, but the drives work just fine... At least everything I have tested.

            Willard found out that some SSDs just don't work in Dell servers..

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • DashrenderD
              Dashrender @dave247
              last edited by

              @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

              @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

              @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

              Maybe I should see if I can install Hyper-V on an SD card.. I have an iDRAC with the card slot

              No, don't do that. MS used to semi-support that long ago. Now they do not at all.

              k then.. I guess I'll just leave the single SSD in and finish installing it to that. I started the install process to one Intel SSD then paused to come post my questions here.

              FYI, this is a complete waste of a SSD drive. More IOPs wasted on something that can't/won't use it.

              Why are you setting up Hyper-V today when you don't have drives to store the VM's on? Why not wait until you buy those 6+ large HDDs and make a OBR10 and install Hyper-V on there.

              It doesn't need to be 8 drives, 6 is fine if that gives you the storage you need. Hyper-V install itself is pretty small, I'm guessing 20 GB or less.

              dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • dave247D
                dave247 @Dashrender
                last edited by

                @dashrender said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                Maybe I should see if I can install Hyper-V on an SD card.. I have an iDRAC with the card slot

                No, don't do that. MS used to semi-support that long ago. Now they do not at all.

                k then.. I guess I'll just leave the single SSD in and finish installing it to that. I started the install process to one Intel SSD then paused to come post my questions here.

                FYI, this is a complete waste of a SSD drive. More IOPs wasted on something that can't/won't use it.

                Why are you setting up Hyper-V today when you don't have drives to store the VM's on? Why not wait until you buy those 6+ large HDDs and make a OBR10 and install Hyper-V on there.

                It doesn't need to be 8 drives, 6 is fine if that gives you the storage you need. Hyper-V install itself is pretty small, I'm guessing 20 GB or less.

                Hmm... well, I do have 4x 6TB 7200RPM SATA drives I was planning to use for something else, but I guess I could just use them for this.

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @dave247
                  last edited by

                  @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                  @dashrender said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                  @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                  @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                  Maybe I should see if I can install Hyper-V on an SD card.. I have an iDRAC with the card slot

                  No, don't do that. MS used to semi-support that long ago. Now they do not at all.

                  k then.. I guess I'll just leave the single SSD in and finish installing it to that. I started the install process to one Intel SSD then paused to come post my questions here.

                  FYI, this is a complete waste of a SSD drive. More IOPs wasted on something that can't/won't use it.

                  Why are you setting up Hyper-V today when you don't have drives to store the VM's on? Why not wait until you buy those 6+ large HDDs and make a OBR10 and install Hyper-V on there.

                  It doesn't need to be 8 drives, 6 is fine if that gives you the storage you need. Hyper-V install itself is pretty small, I'm guessing 20 GB or less.

                  Hmm... well, I do have 4x 6TB 7200RPM SATA drives I was planning to use for something else, but I guess I could just use them for this.

                  Maybe you should list all of the drives that you have to work with, and we can guide from there.

                  dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • dave247D
                    dave247 @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by dave247

                    @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                    @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                    @dashrender said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                    @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                    @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                    @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                    Maybe I should see if I can install Hyper-V on an SD card.. I have an iDRAC with the card slot

                    No, don't do that. MS used to semi-support that long ago. Now they do not at all.

                    k then.. I guess I'll just leave the single SSD in and finish installing it to that. I started the install process to one Intel SSD then paused to come post my questions here.

                    FYI, this is a complete waste of a SSD drive. More IOPs wasted on something that can't/won't use it.

                    Why are you setting up Hyper-V today when you don't have drives to store the VM's on? Why not wait until you buy those 6+ large HDDs and make a OBR10 and install Hyper-V on there.

                    It doesn't need to be 8 drives, 6 is fine if that gives you the storage you need. Hyper-V install itself is pretty small, I'm guessing 20 GB or less.

                    Hmm... well, I do have 4x 6TB 7200RPM SATA drives I was planning to use for something else, but I guess I could just use them for this.

                    Maybe you should list all of the drives that you have to work with, and we can guide from there.

                    haha.. sorry.. ok so I have 4x 6TB drives and then I have a ton of 2.5" 300GB 10k and 15k SAS drives, but the problem here is I only have a couple of 2.5" to 3.5" caddie spacers.. I'd have to really dig to find more.

                    So if I just wanted to use the 4x 6TB drives, would I create a RAID array and then create two separate volumes on that, one for Hyper-V and one for storage, or just have one volume and install Hyper-V to that?

                    coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      So with 4x 6TB drives in RAID 10 (the only option with four drives other than RAID 0 because RAID 5 would be insane, even in a lab) you might as well go with your original ideal of putting in as many SSD or 15K drives as you can get caddies for, making a smaller array of those, and using that, too. Can you get four and four?

                      dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • dave247D
                        dave247 @scottalanmiller
                        last edited by dave247

                        @scottalanmiller said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                        you might as well go with your original ideal of putting in as many SSD or 15K drives as you can get caddies for, making a smaller array of those, and using that, too. Can you get four and four?

                        Are you saying use 4+ SSD or 15k drives in RIAD10 and making the smaller array and using it for only Hyper-V - in addition to another RAID10 array for storage?

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • DustinB3403D
                          DustinB3403
                          last edited by

                          If you go with SSD's you'd use OBR5.

                          If you went with 15K drives you'd use OBR6.

                          dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • dave247D
                            dave247 @DustinB3403
                            last edited by

                            @dustinb3403 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                            If you go with SSD's you'd use OBR5.

                            If you went with 15K drives you'd use OBR6.

                            Why?

                            DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • DustinB3403D
                              DustinB3403 @dave247
                              last edited by

                              @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                              @dustinb3403 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                              If you go with SSD's you'd use OBR5.

                              If you went with 15K drives you'd use OBR6.

                              Why?

                              OBR5 is safe (enough) because URE's don't happen with SSD's. SSD's just die. So you'd replace it as soon as it died. They also rebuild way faster.

                              OBR6 with 15K drives because you have a lot of them, but they are smaller capacity (300GB). So you'd get enough performance and the most usable space from the array.

                              dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • DustinB3403D
                                DustinB3403
                                last edited by

                                Where as using OBR10 with 15k drives will be faster than OBR6 with 15k drives, your usable storage is half of what you can fit into the server.

                                (12x300)/2

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • dave247D
                                  dave247 @DustinB3403
                                  last edited by

                                  @dustinb3403 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                  @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                  @dustinb3403 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                  If you go with SSD's you'd use OBR5.

                                  If you went with 15K drives you'd use OBR6.

                                  Why?

                                  OBR5 is safe (enough) because URE's don't happen with SSD's. SSD's just die. So you'd replace it as soon as it died. They also rebuild way faster.

                                  OBR6 with 15K drives because you have a lot of them, but they are smaller capacity (300GB). So you'd get enough performance and the most usable space from the array.

                                  oooh. I didn't know that about URE's and SSD's

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • coliverC
                                    coliver @dave247
                                    last edited by

                                    @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                    4x 6TB drives

                                    That's 12TB usable in RAID 10. Not sure why that wouldn't be a good option.

                                    dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • dave247D
                                      dave247 @coliver
                                      last edited by

                                      @coliver said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                      @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                      4x 6TB drives

                                      That's 12TB usable in RAID 10. Not sure why that wouldn't be a good option.

                                      Because I was planning to not use them for this.. but now I'm considering changing my mind.

                                      coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • coliverC
                                        coliver @dave247
                                        last edited by

                                        @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                        @coliver said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                        @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                        4x 6TB drives

                                        That's 12TB usable in RAID 10. Not sure why that wouldn't be a good option.

                                        Because I was planning to not use them for this.. but now I'm considering changing my mind.

                                        Oh I see. What were you planning on using them for? Could you roll that into this via a VM and application?

                                        dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • dave247D
                                          dave247 @coliver
                                          last edited by

                                          @coliver said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                          @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                          @coliver said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                          @dave247 said in Enterprise 15K SAS drives vs consumer grade SSD in a Dell server?:

                                          4x 6TB drives

                                          That's 12TB usable in RAID 10. Not sure why that wouldn't be a good option.

                                          Because I was planning to not use them for this.. but now I'm considering changing my mind.

                                          Oh I see. What were you planning on using them for? Could you roll that into this via a VM and application?

                                          They are in a different server now, holding some files.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • NetworkNerdN
                                            NetworkNerd
                                            last edited by

                                            Spend the $15 to get a USB drive to be the install target for Hyper-V, and then boot the server from that USB drive each time. Like others have said, keep the SSD to give yourself some fast storage to play with and not to run a hypervisor.

                                            If you're only playing with a single SSD you could even leverage it and use the free version of Starwind to accelerate the VMs running on the spinning disk datastore (I think). Someone else may want to verify this specific point.

                                            dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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