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    RAID on SSD's

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    • CCWTechC
      CCWTech @Francesco Provino
      last edited by

      @francesco-provino said in RAID on SSD's:

      You don't "need" a separate controller, simply you will saturate both a separate SAS controller (RAID HW) and an integrated SATA one (SW RAID). Essentially, you can saturate the band of a PCIe 3.1 8x link.

      So what are options when do you need to have more than 6-7 SSD's in a server then?

      scottalanmillerS F 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • F
        Francesco Provino
        last edited by

        The performance of a single storage array is limited by the width of the PCIe lane. The only way to overcome this limitation is striping arrays across multiple PCIe interfaces.

        I don't think you need something like that in a scale-up setup, we are talking about many Gbyte/s and several millions of IOPS.

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

          @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

          @francesco-provino said in RAID on SSD's:

          You don't "need" a separate controller, simply you will saturate both a separate SAS controller (RAID HW) and an integrated SATA one (SW RAID). Essentially, you can saturate the band of a PCIe 3.1 8x link.

          So what are options when do you need to have more than 6-7 SSD's in a server then?

          That's not the limitation. The speed doesn't keep increasing.

          YOu are asking about performance numbers literally past any but something like .0001% of all companies in the world would need at most. You are moving from a new hundred IOPS today, there is no possibility that you need to leap to 10+ million IOPS tomorrow.

          JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
          • F
            Francesco Provino @CCWTech
            last edited by

            @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

            @francesco-provino said in RAID on SSD's:

            You don't "need" a separate controller, simply you will saturate both a separate SAS controller (RAID HW) and an integrated SATA one (SW RAID). Essentially, you can saturate the band of a PCIe 3.1 8x link.

            So what are options when do you need to have more than 6-7 SSD's in a server then?

            No problem with both software raid or hardware raid card: a modern LSI/AVAGO/Broadcom controller can take up to 255 SAS/SATA SSD in a single array. Just, don't forget that the controller will be the performance bottleneck of the array.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • ObsolesceO
              Obsolesce
              last edited by

              I've got a hypervisor with 10 SSDs and 6 spinners. The SSDs have special needs and is a RAID 10, but nowhere else do I have SSDs in a RAID 10. 5 everywhere else.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • JaredBuschJ
                JaredBusch @scottalanmiller
                last edited by JaredBusch

                @scottalanmiller said in RAID on SSD's:

                @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

                @francesco-provino said in RAID on SSD's:

                You don't "need" a separate controller, simply you will saturate both a separate SAS controller (RAID HW) and an integrated SATA one (SW RAID). Essentially, you can saturate the band of a PCIe 3.1 8x link.

                So what are options when do you need to have more than 6-7 SSD's in a server then?

                That's not the limitation. The speed doesn't keep increasing.

                YOu are asking about performance numbers literally past any but something like .0001% of all companies in the world would need at most. You are moving from a new hundred IOPS today, there is no possibility that you need to leap to 10+ million IOPS tomorrow.

                The problem is @Francesco-Provino confused him by taking about saturating the bus. A fact, but not a relevant fact to the question at hand.

                @CCWTech just needs to put the SSD in a RAID5 and move on.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • CCWTechC
                  CCWTech
                  last edited by

                  I don't feel confused...

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • CCWTechC
                    CCWTech
                    last edited by

                    ... But I do have another question... For SSD's...

                    If you are doing RAID 5, would you ever use that as a boot volume? Or do a RAID 1 for boot and RAID 5 for data?

                    travisdh1T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • travisdh1T
                      travisdh1 @CCWTech
                      last edited by

                      @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

                      ... But I do have another question... For SSD's...

                      If you are doing RAID 5, would you ever use that as a boot volume? Or do a RAID 1 for boot and RAID 5 for data?

                      OBR5 (One Big Raid 5). Having drives for the hypervisor alone is such a waste, it's not like the box is going to be rebooting every 5 minutes. You'll get better performance and capacity by using OBR5.

                      DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • DashrenderD
                        Dashrender @travisdh1
                        last edited by

                        @travisdh1 said in RAID on SSD's:

                        @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

                        ... But I do have another question... For SSD's...

                        If you are doing RAID 5, would you ever use that as a boot volume? Or do a RAID 1 for boot and RAID 5 for data?

                        OBR5 (One Big Raid 5). Having drives for the hypervisor alone is such a waste, it's not like the box is going to be rebooting every 5 minutes. You'll get better performance and capacity by using OBR5.

                        Even if it was - what difference would that make? Why waste drives and drive bays for booting a hypervisor (or an OS)?

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • CCWTechC
                          CCWTech
                          last edited by

                          For some reason I recall that booting to a RAID 5 was unreliable (shouldn't do), but it's been so long since I have worked with RAID 5 I'm not sure where I heard that.

                          DashrenderD travisdh1T scottalanmillerS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • DashrenderD
                            Dashrender @CCWTech
                            last edited by

                            @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

                            For some reason I recall that booting to a RAID 5 was unreliable (shouldn't do), but it's been so long since I have worked with RAID 5 I'm not sure where I heard that.

                            I do not/have not had this experience.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • travisdh1T
                              travisdh1 @CCWTech
                              last edited by

                              @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

                              For some reason I recall that booting to a RAID 5 was unreliable (shouldn't do), but it's been so long since I have worked with RAID 5 I'm not sure where I heard that.

                              RAID 5 on HDD is unreliable today, and shouldn't ever be used. SSD drives don't have the same issues. That might be what you're remembering.

                              CCWTechC DashrenderD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
                              • CCWTechC
                                CCWTech @travisdh1
                                last edited by

                                @travisdh1 said in RAID on SSD's:

                                @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

                                For some reason I recall that booting to a RAID 5 was unreliable (shouldn't do), but it's been so long since I have worked with RAID 5 I'm not sure where I heard that.

                                RAID 5 on HDD is unreliable today, and shouldn't ever be used. SSD drives don't have the same issues. That might be what you're remembering.

                                I believe so as well.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • DashrenderD
                                  Dashrender @travisdh1
                                  last edited by

                                  @travisdh1 said in RAID on SSD's:

                                  @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

                                  For some reason I recall that booting to a RAID 5 was unreliable (shouldn't do), but it's been so long since I have worked with RAID 5 I'm not sure where I heard that.

                                  RAID 5 on HDD is unreliable today, and shouldn't ever be used. SSD drives don't have the same issues. That might be what you're remembering.

                                  While I agree that it shouldn't be use - it's not because it's unreliable. It's because it's changes of running into a URE during a resilver is very high depending upon the size of the array (i.e. if the array is 12TB or higher, the chances of having an URE during rebuild is near 100% on consumer drives, or 120 TB on enterprise class drives)

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

                                    @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

                                    For some reason I recall that booting to a RAID 5 was unreliable (shouldn't do), but it's been so long since I have worked with RAID 5 I'm not sure where I heard that.

                                    That was never a RAID issue. You are thinking of a specific problem with any non-RAID 1 on software RAID where you can't boot to RAID before the RAID has been created. It's nothing to do with the RAID but with the boot sector not existing until after the RAID has been created. Chicken and egg problem. RAID 1 gets around this by having a full copy of the entire boot sector on every disk in the array.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                    • CCWTechC
                                      CCWTech
                                      last edited by

                                      Would a RAID 6 be better for the extra redundancy?

                                      wirestyle22W scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • wirestyle22W
                                        wirestyle22 @CCWTech
                                        last edited by wirestyle22

                                        @ccwtech That additional parity creates a lot of complication (calculation-wise). I haven't seen Raid 6 offered as a solution unless you really need double the parity capacity--which I've never experienced needing personally but I know is out there

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • CCWTechC
                                          CCWTech
                                          last edited by CCWTech

                                          So for greater redundancy RAID 10?

                                          Is the reason for 5 vs. 10 just the cost of the extra drive?

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

                                            @ccwtech said in RAID on SSD's:

                                            So for greater redundancy RAID 10?

                                            Is the reason for 5 vs. 10 just the cost of the extra drive?

                                            Yes, it's a much bigger cost on SSDs.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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