Hard Drives Made for RAID Use
An anonymous reader writes "Hard drive giant Western Digital recently released a very interesting product, hard drives designed to work in a RAID. The Caviar RE SATA 320 GB is an enterprise level drive without native command queueing and uses an SATA interface. In works better in RAID than other drives because of features like its time-limited error recovery and 32-bit CRC error checking, so it is an option when previously only SCSI drives would be considered."
Does anyone have any benchmarks to back up this claim? This seems very vague.
Information wants a fueled airplane waiting at the hangar and no one gets hurt.
While I've been a proponent of SCSI for a long time -- Apple really was thinking ahead when it had it in Macs all those years -- it has been getting thread-worn. Ultra-wide-tall-double-hex-SCSI is just getting to be too much!
SATA is the right technology, especially for controllers since each channel is dedicated. The only alternative is Firewire, and there are no native controller drives.
I love my computer -- You make me feel alright (Bad Religion)
On the newegg link they list the MTBF as 1 million hours. Google tells me that that is about 114 years. How can it have such high mtbf? Is that newegg just not having correct data or is there something special about these drives (or are they designed to be "used" less)?
Here's an interesting quote from Tom's Hardware:
"In sum, we must state that all Command Queuing enabled drives have an advantage over those that do not support this feature. At the same time, CPU load is also slightly higher when Command Queuing technologies are used. However, considering the performance of today's processors, the additional CPU load is a marginal factor."
Basically, you put some load on the processor for increased disk performance... Why not include it?
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These buggers are hard to find for anywhere near decent cash. I've found one model that is fairly popular, going by several different names and brands, but nobody seems to have them in stock. They look like a GREAT deal and loaded with most or alll of the best features of raid5. (hot swap, live rebuild, live GROW, etc) Has anyone seen one IN STOCK anywhere?
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Same exact models:
http://www.raidweb.com/fb605fw.html
http://www.micronet.com/General/prodList.asp?CatI
http://www.firewiremax.com/fire-wire-1394-ilink/m
http://www.pcrush.com/prodspec.asp?ln=1&itemno=77
http://www.cooldrives.com/firewire-raid-5-enclosu
http://www.topmicrousa.com/combo-205.html
same internals, different enclosure:
http://fwdepot.com/thestore/product_info.php/prod
http://www.cooldrives.com/fii13toatade.html
Everyone I call says they have them in stock. Then I ask them to check and they suddenly change their mind and say no it's not really in stock, (despite what their web page says) and they expect it in the generic "1-2 weeks". (retail-speak for "we don't know when it'll be in, please call back later")
Two of them actually told me they have yet to receive any of these units, so I don't think they've shipped from the manufacturer yet? (vaporware?)
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
Is there a reasonable cost, relatively low power RAID-5 setup for home networks? I'd love to set up a file server with gigabit ethernet and RAID-5 to serve as the home directories for my multiple machines. Things like the Buffalo LinkStation are a step in the right direction, but no RAID, etc. Is my only solution a Celeron or Pentium-M based PC? If so, is it possible to set up such a system to act as home directories for a combo of Windows, Mac, and /or Linux machines?
Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
EIDE drives are the cheapest type. But AFAIK, each drive has a controller card onboard, which seems redundant when all the drives are being controlled in conjunction. Software RAIDs seem to have parity (pun intended ;) with HW raid controllers, but wouldn't a real "Made for RAID" drive have nearly no controller logic of its own (maybe just data separator and head/spindle speed/position calibration)? Lots of logic for controlling the RAID drive will be on the central controller card, or running on the CPU. So why have more on the drive? The cheaper the drives, the bigger the array at the same budget (shared overhead of common controller).
Am I correct, or are some RAID drive makers already doing this? Or have I just got all the controller:drive economics wrong?
--
make install -not war
Its like this quote from the article:
It's all bullshit. Sure, it might be better than another drive for use in a raid, but its not like people couldn't consider IDE drives in the past, and that this is some miracle cure.Just look at what RAID means - Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks. Lots of people use cheapie IDE hard disks in RAID setups. We've got a 4-drive terrabyte raid. Why would we consider expensive drives when the whole idea is to use cheap drives in a redundant array?
Fuck the marketing departments. And fuck the PHBs who make their buying decisions based on them. Oh, right, the PHBs *ARE* getting fucked by the marketing departments. Sorry lads, carry on.
Specificially RAID 0, mirrored. It would be nice to be able to split one of those oversized drives into a mirrored drive, using the opposite sides of the disk platter as mirrors. You'd get better reliability with the slight trade off of all that surplus disk space you never use.
Most products (and especially electronics) have a failure rate that when plotted over time looks like a bathtub. There is a high initial failure rate (infant mortality) that drops over time to a base rate (the random failure rate described by MTBF), this low failure rate continues until one reaches the end of useful life of the product, when the failure rate rises once again as age and wear effects cause the device to fail.
Note that most extended warranties are designed by the seller to kick in after the early failure rate has droped, but expire before the end-of-life failures.
The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
Where's the review of how well it facilitates serving pages through Apache? Oh, that's replaced by "Look how neat the drive looks!"
I don't moderate anymore. Karma penalty for 90% fair mods? Can I mod that unfair?
What do you mean sat on the wayside ? It's been out and about for donkeys years, I've been involved in storage for 9 years and it pre-dates me by a LOOOONG time.
Wow, did Western Digital plot to have your family killed? What a vendetta!
All hard drive manufacturers have gone through cycles of poor quality and reliability. Maxtor, Seagate, IBM/Hitatchi (remember the "DeathStar") have all had the same problems. In all my years of repairing and building desktops, I can say I have had the most problems with Seagates and (the now owned by Maxtor) Quantum drives. If you ask someone else, they'll give you a different answer too.
This drive has a 5 year warranty. Most other Western Digital's have a 3 year warranty, even if you buy the OEMs (in most cases). And read the articles above for what 1 million hrs MTBF means!
Recent promise RAID cards have a "gigabyte boundrary" mode, where they round the size of the array down to the nearest whole gigabyte.
This allows for minor variations in replacement disc sizes, at the cost of wasting some disc space. (It'd make a 250 gb array instead of a 250.23 GB one.)
I personally trust WD more than I trust Maxtor, but all manufacturers have bad years and bad models. This year I only trust Seagate, on only certain specific models.
What part of "don't care about data loss" did you fail to understand?
Why would I want to waste %25 of my volume's storage capacity to get better data security on something where I don't _care_ about data security? And no - raid-5 doesn't match raid-0 for speed even on reads, at least not in my linux software raid setup. No "probably" about it - I have a raid5 volume running on the same hd's, where I keep data I actually care about.
I really wish there was some sort of standardisation of reviews such that ones like this could be filtered out. How it got on slashdot is beyond me!
They review a RAID edition drive yet don't even test it in RAID5! Unless reviews are thorough how are we supposed to draw anything but the vaguest conclusions. This reviews testing set should have included all these combinations:
- software vs hardware RAID solution (including hybrid semi-hardware cards like RocketRaid 1820A)
- 2,4,8 drive tests for RAID0,1,1+0,5
- synthetic tests such as the one they used or HDTach or similar as well as real world tests such as a database benchmarch, file server test
i hate to rant but these thoughtless reviews really are a waste of time.