I'm experiment with RAID, looking for an inexpensive way to boost performance.  
I bought 4 Seagate 7200.9 120 GB SATA drives and two SIIG dual-port SATA cards. 
 (NB: I don't plan to run RAID 0 in production, probably RAID 10, so no need to 
comment on the failure rate of RAID 0.)

I used this raw serial-speed test:

  time sh -c "dd if=/dev/zero of=./bigfile bs=8k count=1000000 && sync"
  (unmount/remount)
  time sh -c "dd if=./bigfile of=/dev/null bs=8k count=1000000 && sync"

Which showed that the RAID 0 4-disk array was almost exactly twice as fast as 
each disk individually.  I expected 4X performance for a 4-disk RAID 0.  My 
suspicion is that each of these budget SATA cards is bandwidth limited; they 
can't actually handle two disks simultaneously, and I'd need to get four 
separate SATA cards to get 4X performance (or a more expensive card such as the 
Areca someone mentioned the other day).

On the other hand, it "feels like" (using our application) the seek performance 
is quite a bit better, which I'd expect given my hypothesis about the SIIG cards.  I 
don't have concrete benchmarks on seek speed.

Thanks,
Craig

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