On 05/06/2015 04:32 PM, Vladimir Mosgalin wrote:
Hi ToddAndMargo!

  On 2015.05.06 at 00:48:30 -0700, ToddAndMargo wrote next:

http://www.intel.ie/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/white-papers/ssd-dc-s3500-workload-raid-paper.pdf


      The system used for RAID 1 testing include the following:
      • LSI MegaRAID 9265-8i* controller card

      To summarize:
      • In both RAID 1 and RAID 5, the Intel SSD DC S3500 Series
        drive shows excellent scalability, performance, and consistency.

      • Very little latency was introduced by the RAID controller
        in RAID 1. In RAID 5, the overhead and latency are slightly
         higher.

      • In random, mixed read/write workloads, SSDs perform
        significantly (as much as 100 times) better than HDDs
        in a similar situation


Maybe the S3500 is what I want?  They are still available
at my distributors.

They are fine drives. In fact, I got servers running them; excellent
performance, no problem with incompressible data (unlike drives with SF
controllers) - this matters to me because I'm using zfs on linux with
compression. Sustained write speed >500 MB/s (480GB model).

However, like I said before, if long-term performance is needed,

It is, but it will be in a high end workstation.  99% of the
writes will be OS related and not user related.

I
advise against using them in hardware RAID controller. This document
only shows after-install performance; they didn't do any endurance
testing. Without TRIM, performance of this drive will degrade.
Buy Plextor M5/M6 if your environment doesn't support TRIM.


I'm curious, what stops you from using software RAID with mdadm?
For two-disk RAID 1 it provides excellent performance, high
compatibility and TRIM support. I could understand if you needed
hardware controller for RAID6 with tons of disks, in RAID6 or something,
but for two-disk RAID1?..

--

Vladimir


Hi Vladimir,

I am allergic to software RAID.  I adore the way an independent
controller works.

Thank you for helping me with this,

-T

--
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Computers are like air conditioners.
They malfunction when you open windows
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