On May 27, 2014 6:39 PM, "Bob Sanders" wrote: > > Mark Knecht, mused, then expounded: > > Hi all, > > The list is quiet. Please excuse me waking it up. (Or trying to...) ;-) > > > > I'm at the point where I'm a few months from running out of disk > > space on my RAID6 so I'm considering how to move forward. I thought > > I'd check in here and get any ideas folks have. Thanks in advance. > > > > Beware - if Adobe acroread is used, and you opt for a 3TB home > directory, there is a chance it will not work. Or more specifically, > acroread is still 32-bit. It's only something I've seen with the xfs > filesystem. And Adobe has ignored it for approx. 3yrs now. > > > The system is a Gentoo 64-bit, mostly stable, using a i7-980x > > Extreme Edition processor with 24GB DRAM. Large chassis, 6 removable > > HD bays, room for 6 other drives, a large power supply. > > > > The disk subsystem is a 1.4TB RAID6 built from five SATA2 500GB WD > > RAID-Edition 3 drives. The RAID has not had a single glitch in the 4+ > > years I've used this machine. > > > > Generally there are 4 classes of data on the RAID: > > > > 1) Gentoo (obviously), configs backed up every weekend. I plan to > > rebuild from scratch using existing configs if there's a failure. > > Being down for a couple of days is not an issue. > > 2) VMs - about 300GB. Loaded every morning, stopped & saved every > > night, backed up every weekend. > > 3) Financial data - lots of it - stocks, futures, options, etc. > > Performance requirements are pretty low. Backed up every weekend. > > 4) Video files - backed up to a different location than items 1/2/3 > > whenever there are changes > > > > After eclean-dist/eclean-pkg I'm down to about 80GB free and this > > will fill up in 3-6 months so it's time to make some changes. > > > > My thoughts: > > > > 1) Buy three (or even just two) 5400 RPM 3TB WD Red drives and go with > > RAID1. This would use the internal SATA2 ports so it wouldn't be the > > highest performance but likely a lot better than my SATA2 RAID6. > > > > 2) Buy two 7200 RPM 3TB WD Red drives and an LSI logic hardware RAID > > controller. This would be SATA3 so probably way more performance than > > I have now. MUCH more expensive though. > > > > RAID 1 is fine, RAID 10 is better, but comsumes 4 drives and SATA ports. > > > 3) #1 + an SSD. I have an unused 120GB SSD so I could get another, > > make a 2-disk RAID1, put Gentoo on that and everything else on the > > newer 3TB drives. More complex, probably lower reliability and I'm not > > sure I gain much. > > > > Beyond this I need to talk file system types. I'm fat dumb and > > happy with Ext4 and don't really relish dealing with new stuff but > > now's the time to at least look. > > > > If you change, do not use ZFS and possibly BTRFS if the system does not > have ECC DRAM. A single, unnoticed, ECC error can corrupt the data pool > and be written to the file system, which effectively renders it corrupt > without a way to recover. > > FWIW - a Synology DS414slim can hold 4 x 1TB WD Red NAS 2.5" drives and > provide a boot of nfs or iSCSI to your VMs. The downside is the NAS box > and drives would go for a bit north of $636. The upside is all your > movies and VM files could move off your workstation and the workstation > would still host the VMs via a mount of the NAS box. +1 for the Synology NAS boxes, those things are awesome, fast, reliable, upgradable (if you buy a larger one), and the best value available for iSCSI attached VMs. > > > Anyway, that's the basic outline. Any thoughts, ideas, corrections, > > expansions, etc., I'm very interested in talking about. > > > > Cheers, > > Mark > > > > -- > - > >