> From: discuss-bounces+blu=nedharvey....@blu.org [mailto:discuss-
> bounces+blu=nedharvey....@blu.org] On Behalf Of Derek Martin
> 
> Now, these days, it's actually hard to buy a disk
> that won't give you more than 8MB/s sustained transfer rate (which is
> roughly what you could expect over 100Mb network).  But Gigabit networks
> are common now, and if your NFS server is built for it (i.e. it isn't just yet
> another desktop with a single local disk) you should easily be able to far
> exceed the performance of a workstation's cheap local disk.

I've done a lot of benchmarking over the last decade, and I'll say this:

All disks perform approx 1.0 Gbit/sec sustained transfer.  This is true 
regardless of rpm's, regardless SAS or SATA, and even for SSD's.  The highest 
performance enterprise disks sometimes do around 1.2, but even the cheapest 
commodity SATA 5400 RPM disks sustain 1.0.

So even a single commodity disk can max out a 1 Gbit ethernet connection.

I am perfectly aware that many SSD's advertise themselves as sustaining 
500MB/sec (4 Gbit) but in practice, it's completely hogwash.  

So, given a single 1Gbit ethernet connection, you will NOT exceed the 
performance of a single local disk, regardless of how great the storage array 
is at the other end of the ethernet cable.  However, there do exist much faster 
and more efficient buses out there - Fiber Channel, Infiniband, 10GigE, and 
SAS, which are able to carry several (or even several dozen) fully utilized 
disks worth of performance.  So your storage network architecture definitely 
makes a big difference.  As does your RAID topology, and your decision to use 
hard/soft raid, and everything else you can think of.
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