Access is crap to use for a multiuser app. Don't discount the fact that the
perf could be simply related to that. 
 
--
O'Reilly Active Directory Third Edition -
http://www.joeware.net/win/ad3e.htm 
 
 

  _____  

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dave Wade
Sent: Thursday, May 18, 2006 7:08 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] [OT] RAID 5 Best Practice


Its the one thing that seems to give us performance issues. Last time I
investigated things running slow, client was quiet (low CPU short disk
queue, minimal paging) , network was quiet yet response was slow. Conclusion
was that server was some how bottle neck. I must admit I didn't do much work
on investigation. I think they should use appropriate tool such as msde
(only a few users) but program is provided by central government, so we are
stuck with it. I wonder if it was just running same time as backups
perhaps...

-----Original Message----- 
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Brian Desmond 
Sent: Thu 18/05/2006 23:34 
To: [email protected] 
Cc: 
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] [OT] RAID 5 Best Practice



Access database will likely get cached on the client in memory, in any case
it’d be all read ops. Access doesn’t cache report output. 

 

Thanks,
Brian Desmond

 <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

c - 312.731.3132

 

 

  _____  

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dave Wade
Sent: Thursday, May 18, 2006 6:22 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] [OT] RAID 5 Best Practice

 


For file sharing, I would consider 0Ư but 5 would be more likely since you
probably want/need the space more than the speed. File sharing doesn't
really beat the disks up relative to a busy DC even in large multi-thousand
user file servers I have seen. 

 

What about when some idiot user sets up an Access database on one and runs
"inappropriate" reports against it.. 

 

 

 

It is why most normal server admins really
have no clue what to look for in terms of IO load on servers but any
Exchange Admin worth anything is looking at that right away in a problem
situation and able to quote IOPS stats off the top of their head and know
what they can get from the underlying disk subsystem. Exchange disk configs
are critical.

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