Looking For RAID Hardware/Software Advice
Lisa Kachold
lisakachold at obnosis.com
Mon Jan 19 12:41:49 MST 2009
I agree wholeheartedly with Joe, that RAID 1 is sufficient for your uses. AND that the external enclosure using USB will also provide a good solution for non-enterprise systems.
<Mine also does the NO POST BTW>
I also always use Google to determine what will and won't work; reading for context.
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Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2009 11:37:28 -0700
From: joe at selectitaly.com
To: plug-discuss at lists.plug.phoenix.az.us
Subject: Re: Looking For RAID Hardware/Software Advice
I'll chime in again to support that card. I've had drives on it fail
twice and the card stayed online both times. I've read it's common for
the module/kernel or the hardware to crash when a drive fails, but I've
never experienced that with the TX4. The card stays online and mdadm
sends me an email to let me know something bad happened. I will point
out again, though, that the card has no RAID ability on its own, fake
or otherwise. I just use mdadm soft RAID under Debian 4.0r2 Testing
(installed a year or two ago) and it worked out of the box with no
special effort.
As for checking Linux compatibility, I usually just read the reviews on
Newegg. Most people will say something like "Works in Ubuntu" or "Works
in Linux" or "Didn't work in Fedora" or whatever. If I don't see any
reviews that say it worked in at least some flavor of Linux, I usually
skip the hardware, unless it's something I really want, then I just
Google it and see what comes up.
The external enclosure comment is also very valid. If you're looking
for a nice enclosure, I'd recommend the Macally G-S350SUA. It's $40
shipped on newegg right now and has USB 2.0, Firewire 400 AND eSATA
connections (and comes with all 3 cables). I've only ever used the USB
port since my prehistoric box lacks any other interface, but it's been
running quite well for the past couple of weeks. Only problem I've had
is if it's plugged in but not powered on, my motherboard won't POST. I
have no idea why, and simply turning it on solves the problem..... very
strange. Anyway, it would allow you to use USB in RAID-1 now and switch
to eSATA if you decide you need the throughput. Best of all, you could
pull it off eSATA and put it on another machine with USB for
recovery/backup/whatever. Keep in mind that USB will be slower than
EIDE or SATA, but if you don't care about that, it's a useful
alternative.
Lastly, Mark, as others have pointed out already and I'm sure you've
gathered, you want RAID-1 (mirroring), not RAID10 (mirrored stripe).
For your use, I wouldn't bother with RAID-5. I set mine up in that
config because large drives used to be a lot more expensive and it was
something fun to set up. For your needs, 2x500GB, 2x750GB or 2x1TB in a
RAID-1 should do you just fine. Option B or C sound good to me.
Out of curiosity, what drives were you pricing?
-Joe
Mark Phillips wrote:
What
controllers have you been pricing? I'm planning a similar backup
server for my home, and I'm not sure which to go with.
Joe Fleming, in an earlier post to this thread, uses this card
on Debian:
Promise TX4 card (4 SATA-II ports on a normal PCI interface, $60
shipped on newegg). It is still $60 at Newegg, and that is the one I
priced.
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