[TriLUG] Re: New system configuration thoughts

Lance A. Brown lance at bearcircle.net
Thu May 3 12:27:46 EDT 2007


Kevin Jones wrote:
> To get RAID 6, you need to have a RAID 6 capable Host Bus Adapter 
> (HBA). I have set them up on HP DL3xx servers that come with a 
> built-in HBA and also on Adaptec SATA HBA's. Most newer RAID cards 
> have RAID 6 capability. SCSI drives are definitely the way to go for 
> enterprise-class storage (particularly with high I/O activity such as
>  databases) as the MTBF (mean time between failure) rate is MUCH 
> better with SCSI than (S)ATA drives (approx. 3 years for SCSI vs. 1 
> year for SATA on average I think.) In other words, plan on buying 
> three SATA drives for every one U320 SCSI drive. Also, be very 
> careful about the SATA drives you purchase if putting them in a RAID 
> array as there is a very big difference between desktop-grade and 
> enterprise (RAID-level)-grade SATA drives. Unfortunately, the vendors
>  probably don't know and manufacturers don't make this point clear, 
> but SATA is reasonably new to the enterprise and you can get stuck 
> with really crappy drives if you buy the wrong kind.

The distinction between SCSI and SATA drives may not be as strong as you
state it.  The "Best Paper" award recipient from the 5th USENIX
Conference on File and Storage Technologies is entitled 'Disk Failures
in the Real World: What Does an MTTF of 1,000,000 Hours Mean to You?'[1]
and contains the following:

   It is interesting to observe that for these data sets there is no
   significant discrepancy between replacement rates for SCSI and FC
   drives, commonly represented as the most reliable types of disk
   drives, and SATA drives, frequently described as lower quality. For
   example, the ARRs of drives in the HPC4 data set, which are
   exclusively SATA drives, are among the lowest of all data sets.

The accepted wisdom about the difference between SCSI and SATA drives
may not be accurate.

--[Lance]

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