Hi,
On Mon, Jul 03, 2000 at 01:44:44PM -0500, James Bottomley wrote:
> > Right. Cache memory on the drive is not a problem. Cache memory on a
> > controller card may be, and in the absence of SCSI reservations, you
> > need to make sure that the reads are coming from the disk and not the
> > controller at least for the quorum partition.
>
> The only case you should have a problem is with a solution based on PCI RAID
> cards connected to a JBOD (like the AMI cluster RAID card, or the DPT
> equivalent for fibre channel). I would be astonished if these cards are
> allowed to cache data on board when in cluster mode. However, if it speaks a
> reasonable SCSI dialect, turn off the WCE (Write Cache Enable) and turn on the
> RCD (Read Cache Disable) bits of the caching mode page which should make it
> behave.
Right --- that's exactly why I'm bringing this up, because I suspect
that the default behaviour is _not_ cluster-safe in all conditions.
I'd rather have an answer from somebody with more knowledge of just
how modern PCI SCSI controllers behave wrt. read caching.
--Stephen
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-scsi" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]