On Fri, January 20, 2017 12:59 pm, Joseph L. Casale wrote:
The disks I am going to use are 6TB Seagate Enterprise ST6000NM0034 7200rpm SAS/12Gbit 128 MB
Sorry to hear that, my experience is the Seagate brand has the shortest MTBF of any disk I have ever used...
If hardware RAID is preferred, the controller's cache could be updated to 4GB and I wonder how much performance gain this would give me?
Lots, especially with slower disks. You can also leverage write back caching if you have a battery on the controller as well. There are countless frameworks and one off utilities that can properly report on the throughput for various patterns, set it up both ways and know for sure.
Not related to your question, but something to keep in mind: What type of enclosure are you using? If you are using an engineered system your enclosure will communicate with the controller. When a disk fails it's a pain in the arse to figure out where it exists physically. If you have an expander for example, this gets even more challenging.
This is why before configuring and installing everything you may want to attach drives one at a time, and upon boot take a note which physical drive number the controller has for that drive, and definitely label it so y9ou will know which drive to pull when drive failure is reported.
Valeri
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++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Valeri Galtsev Sr System Administrator Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics University of Chicago Phone: 773-702-4247 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++