m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
On 09/08/2017 09:49 AM, hw wrote:
Mark Haney wrote:
<snip> >> >> It depends, i. e. I can´t tell how these SSDs would behave if large >> amounts of data would be written and/or read to/from them over extended >> periods of time because I haven´t tested that. That isn´t the >> application, anyway. > > If your I/O is going to be heavy (and you've not mentioned expected > traffic, so we can only go on what little we glean from your posts), > then SSDs will likely start having issues sooner than a mechanical drive > might. (Though, YMMV.) As I've said, we process 600 million messages a > month, on primary SSDs in a VMWare cluster, with mechanical storage for > older, archived user mail. Archived, may not be exactly correct, but > the context should be clear. > One thing to note, which I'm aware of because I was recently spec'ing out a Dell server: Dell, at least, offers two kinds of SSDs, one for heavy write, I think it was, and one for equal r/w. You might dig into that. >> >> But mdadm does, the impact is severe. I know there are ppl saying >> otherwise, but I´ve seen the impact myself, and I definitely don´t want >> it on that particular server because it would likely interfere with other >> services. I don´t know if the software RAID of btrfs is better in that >> or not, though, but I´m seeing btrfs on SSDs being fast, and testing >> with the particular application has shown a speedup of factor 20--30.
Odd, we've never seen anything like that. Of course, we're not handling the kind of mail you are... but serious scientific computing hits storage hard, also.
I never said anything about MD RAID. I trust that about as far as I could throw it. And having had 5 surgeries on my throwing shoulder wouldn't be far.
Why? We have it all over, and have never seen a problem with it. Nor have I, personally, as I have a RAID 1 at home.
<snip>
Make a test and replace a software RAID5 with a hardware RAID5. Even with only 4 disks, you will see an overall performance gain. I´m guessing that the SATA controllers they put onto the mainboards are not designed to handle all the data --- which gets multiplied to all the disks --- and that the PCI bus might get clogged. There´s also the CPU being burdened with the calculations required for the RAID, and that may not be displayed by tools like top, so you can be fooled easily.
Graphics cards have acceleration in hardware for a reason. What was the last time you tried to do software rendering, and what frame rates did you get? :) Offloading the I/O to a designated controller gives you room for the things you actually want to do, similar to a graphics card.