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    Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @Dashrender
      last edited by

      @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

      RAID 5 gives you N-1 Read and worse for write.

      No, all RAID gives you N reads.

      creaytC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • creaytC
        creayt @scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        RAID 5 gives you N-1 Read and worse for write.

        No, all RAID gives you N reads.

        Is the explanation for slower reads for Raid 5 because it's doing other stuff on the drives while trying to read ( like writing the parity data ), or should it be simliar to a Raid 0 of the same number of drives?

        creaytC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • creaytC
          creayt @creayt
          last edited by creayt

          @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          RAID 5 gives you N-1 Read and worse for write.

          No, all RAID gives you N reads.

          Is the explanation for slower reads for Raid 5 because it's doing other stuff on the drives while trying to read ( like writing the parity data ), or should it be simliar to a Raid 0 of the same number of drives?

          Strangely enough on this hardware a Raid 0 of just 2 of these SSDs dramatically outperforms a Raid 5 of 5 of the same drives for reads in my first test ( 500 MiB ), as in 1 GB/s faster Seq Q32TI and almost 3 times faster Seq in Crystal, will post the full results in a sec.

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

            @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

            @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

            @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

            @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

            RAID 5 gives you N-1 Read and worse for write.

            No, all RAID gives you N reads.

            Is the explanation for slower reads for Raid 5 because it's doing other stuff on the drives while trying to read ( like writing the parity data ), or should it be simliar to a Raid 0 of the same number of drives?

            Strangely enough on this hardware a Raid 0 of just 2 of these SSDs dramatically outperforms a Raid 5 of 5 of the same drives for reads, as in 1 GB/s faster Seq Q32TI and almost 3 times faster Seq in Crystal, will post the full results in a sec.

            THat's a controller problem, not a RAID problem. That means that the controller is oversaturated.

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

              RAID is RAID, the math is trivial. What gets hard is figuring out what is wrong with a controller, when a RAID implementation is bad, when a cache is kicking in and so forth.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • creaytC
                creayt
                last edited by

                Ok these aren't apples to apples, some of the numbers are from the previous config so I'm not saying the Raid 5 to Raid 0 / 10 differences are exactly what they'd be w/ the same number of drives, but the single drive and 2 drive Raid 0 are hopefully helpful in predicting the performance characteristics of 0 at each quantity.

                0_1502470273064_78cfb967-3934-4a3b-b85c-dc48dc693f11-image.png

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

                  We all understand that there are differences with different RAID types.

                  The point of the matter is you opt'd for RAID0 because you believe you have a need for all of the IOPS in the world, yet don't care about backups.

                  But you are missing critical pieces of this design like virtualization, ram cache etc to get better, safer results.

                  creaytC scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • creaytC
                    creayt @DustinB3403
                    last edited by

                    @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                    We all understand that there are differences with different RAID types.

                    The point of the matter is you opt'd for RAID0 because you believe you have a need for all of the IOPS in the world, yet don't care about backups.

                    But you are missing critical pieces of this design like virtualization, ram cache etc to get better, safer results.

                    Are IOPS what you want for heavy duty users are making database writes concurrently all day long? I don't know much about drive characteristics/performance other than the basic throughput stuff. Because backup is streamed out in realtime that's taken care of as far as I'm concerned, part of what makes Raid 0 a candidate at least.

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

                      @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                      @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                      We all understand that there are differences with different RAID types.

                      The point of the matter is you opt'd for RAID0 because you believe you have a need for all of the IOPS in the world, yet don't care about backups.

                      But you are missing critical pieces of this design like virtualization, ram cache etc to get better, safer results.

                      Are IOPS what you want for heavy duty users are making database writes concurrently all day long? I don't know much about drive characteristics/performance other than the basic throughput stuff. Because backup is streamed out in realtime that's taken care of as far as I'm concerned, part of what makes Raid 0 a candidate at least.

                      Yes IOPS are the consideration you need to be looking at. What has yet to be answered is how active is this database going to actually be?

                      Will you have 10,000 people/processes constantly making changes?

                      creaytC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • creaytC
                        creayt @DustinB3403
                        last edited by

                        @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        We all understand that there are differences with different RAID types.

                        The point of the matter is you opt'd for RAID0 because you believe you have a need for all of the IOPS in the world, yet don't care about backups.

                        But you are missing critical pieces of this design like virtualization, ram cache etc to get better, safer results.

                        Are IOPS what you want for heavy duty users are making database writes concurrently all day long? I don't know much about drive characteristics/performance other than the basic throughput stuff. Because backup is streamed out in realtime that's taken care of as far as I'm concerned, part of what makes Raid 0 a candidate at least.

                        Yes IOPS are the consideration you need to be looking at. What has yet to be answered is how active is this database going to actually be?

                        Will you have 10,000 people/processes constantly making changes?

                        Ideally more than that, but it'll be a gradual climb. Right now it's in private alpha w/ ~ 100 users and they post stuff all the time. Once I make it public I imagine the content volume will skyrocket.

                        scottalanmillerS S 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller @DustinB3403
                          last edited by

                          @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                          We all understand that there are differences with different RAID types.

                          The point of the matter is you opt'd for RAID0 because you believe you have a need for all of the IOPS in the world, yet don't care about backups.

                          But you are missing critical pieces of this design like virtualization, ram cache etc to get better, safer results.

                          He's got backups of the data. He's doing devops style backups.

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

                            @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                            @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                            @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                            @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                            We all understand that there are differences with different RAID types.

                            The point of the matter is you opt'd for RAID0 because you believe you have a need for all of the IOPS in the world, yet don't care about backups.

                            But you are missing critical pieces of this design like virtualization, ram cache etc to get better, safer results.

                            Are IOPS what you want for heavy duty users are making database writes concurrently all day long? I don't know much about drive characteristics/performance other than the basic throughput stuff. Because backup is streamed out in realtime that's taken care of as far as I'm concerned, part of what makes Raid 0 a candidate at least.

                            Yes IOPS are the consideration you need to be looking at. What has yet to be answered is how active is this database going to actually be?

                            Will you have 10,000 people/processes constantly making changes?

                            Ideally more than that, but it'll be a gradual climb. Right now it's in private alpha w/ ~ 100 users and they post stuff all the time. Once I make it public I imagine the content volume will skyrocket.

                            MySQL is likely your performance bottleneck there.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • B
                              bnrstnr
                              last edited by bnrstnr

                              How is your internet going to serve up all this RAID0 SSD awesomeness?? Do you really have the bandwidth to allow the hardware to be the bottleneck?

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

                                Copying to the other server is not a backup, FYI.

                                DustinB3403D scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • DustinB3403D
                                  DustinB3403 @Dashrender
                                  last edited by

                                  @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                  Copying to the other server is not a backup, FYI.

                                  Not a good one, that's for sure. As there is no way to be certain that the copy is functional.

                                  creaytC scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • creaytC
                                    creayt @bnrstnr
                                    last edited by

                                    @bnrstnr said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                    How is your internet going to serve up all this RAID0 SSD awesomeness?? Do you really have the bandwidth to allow the hardware to be the bottleneck?

                                    A combination of things, I'm architecting the front-end in a way that it sends the bare minimum out to the user on each request and uses persistent libraries to construct the interfaces to decimate the amount of transfer in general, all of the media and static resources are served out by a CDN, etc. But yeah, I don't think bandwidth will be the issue, but the datacenter I use has super duper bandwidth options if it gets to that point from what I understand.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • creaytC
                                      creayt @DustinB3403
                                      last edited by

                                      @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                      @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                      Copying to the other server is not a backup, FYI.

                                      Not a good one, that's for sure. As there is no way to be certain that the copy is functional.

                                      What do you mean? The live sites will be serving from both copies of the database, which is the evidence/certainty that it's functional, no?

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

                                        @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                        Copying to the other server is not a backup, FYI.

                                        I don't think he means that. He has an HA pair AND he's taking a backup from what I saw.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • scottalanmillerS
                                          scottalanmiller @DustinB3403
                                          last edited by

                                          @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                          @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                          Copying to the other server is not a backup, FYI.

                                          Not a good one, that's for sure. As there is no way to be certain that the copy is functional.

                                          What do you mean? It's a live cluster. That is definitely being testing constantly. It's mirrored, live copies. THe backup itself, that he has to test offline.

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

                                            How are you confirming the second server is hosting access to this site?

                                            So this is a active/active setup, correct?

                                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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