Comparison of Nine SATA RAID 5 Adapters
Robbedoeske writes "Tweakers.net has put online a comparison of nine Serial ATA RAID 5 adapters. Can the establishment counter the attack of the newcomers? Which of the contestants delivers the best performance, offers the best value for money and has the best featureset?"
After 32 pages, it's probably just best to skip to the conclusion:
http://www.tweakers.net/reviews/557/32
Where it has the executive summary:
Areca ARC-1120: highly recommended
RAIDCore BC4852: recommended
HighPoint RocketRAID 1820A: recommended
For several reasons, we will refuse recommendations on the remaing adapters in this comparison
I think that pretty much covers the jist of the article.
Things you think are in the Constitution, but are not.
I had a Rocket Raid 100 (IDE 4 drive RAID1/0) and a RocketRaid 1640 (4 Channel SATA RAID 0,1,5) card. With nothing connected to the 1640 and 2 mirrored drives on the RR 100 the disks attached to the RR100 in bios show up on the 1640, and when windows gets to the boot screen it locks up.
When I removed the drives in windows, it booted up without problems. Highpoint has sent me diag tools to run rather than building this in their lab!
I'm not too impressed with them so far.
3-ware has very good support for linux
See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
Both are nice cards, but I would not recommend them to anyone who does not have extensive PC hardware knowledge. They are fussy, carpicious and very hard to troubleshoot when they go wrong.
Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
http://www.sigsegv.cx/
Areca ARC-1120 looks better on each and every page except for the sequential read/write tests where it tends to come in third [I'm just reading off the graphs].
The RAIDCore BC4852 seems fastest for sequential reads/writes.
BOTH of these have linux support. The Areca supports: Mandrake (9.0),Red Hat (7.3, 8.0, 9.0, AS 3.0), Fedora Core (2, 2 AMD64), SuSE (7.3, 9.1 Pro, 9.0 SLES, 9.0 SLES AMD64)
The RAIDCore: Red Hat (9.0, AS 3.0), Fedora Core (1)
The Areca also supports Windows XP and Server 2003 64-bit versions and BSDs: 4.2R, 4.4R, 5.2.1 (incl. source).
Also, the Areca ARC-1160 (they finished testing after the original article was written, so it didn't make it into most of the text) appears at the top of all of the Index/performance tests, except for "Fileserver - Large Filesize - RAID 1/10" and "My SQL - Data Drive - RAID 1/10".
Video Production Support
SCSI, in its current form, is just opening itself up to becoming antiquated.
Perhaps, though personally I've had far more trouble getting SATA (and IDE) drives to work than SCSI drives and I've used both extensively. Driver issues mostly. SCSI's performance is better in multi-user systems, it's easy to set up, drivers tend to be less problematic especially on systems other than Windows, and it can have more devices attached. People claim it's more reliable though I have no evidence of this, and frankly am a bit dubious of the claim. SATA is also easy to set up and is a lot cheaper, though the drivers are still less ubiquitous than with SCSI and performance doesn't match SCSI yet for multi-user systems. (on a single user system it doesn't matter much)
That said, the next generation of SCSI is Serial Attached SCSI which is compatible with SATA. A SAS controller will be able to use SATA drives if you don't need the extra features of SAS. SCSI isn't going away, it's just adapting.
I am running RAID 5 in my computer right now.
Linux software RAID. Makes all this crap obsolete except for some specific cases.
I can have as many drives as I want, I can have hot swapability, I can have hot spares and all sorts of fun stuff.
Add LVM on top of that and you have a solution that is much superior then going out and buying any raid controller, except for the most fastest.
Linux software raid is actually VERY nice, I don't know of any OS that has better setup.
Now you could argue that a car review in Car and Driver doesn't bother explaining what a transmission does but RAID is several orders for magnitude more complex and esoteric.
There are so many different flavors of RAID it can be hard to keep them straight if you're not working with them every day.
Anyway there are good explanations of RAID here and here.
Insert witty sig here.
If you are dumb enough to use RAID as a substitute for backing up, that is.
Now before I get modded down, I be to remind whoever might read this that what I am saying is FACT. - bogaboga