of action?
--
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]- 0xCD91A427
9907 3747 3CE9 11C5 2B1C F141 D09F 488C CD91 A427
Note: key id 0x299450B6 is lost and inactive.
--
Copyright 2000 Jeffrey Paul
F141 D09F 488C CD91 A427
Note: key id 0x299450B6 is lost and inactive.
--
Copyright 2000 Jeffrey Paul.
The information contained in this message may be
privileged and confidential and protected from
disclosure. If the reader of this message
with a
sprinkling of rational thought isn't politically correct
anymore. (fscking yanks
--
Paul Jakma [EMAIL PROTECTED] PGP5 key:
http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
The most delightful day after the one on which you buy a cottage in
the country
On Wed, 7 Jun 2000, Bryan Batchelder wrote:
I always thought it was the necessary writes to all disks for a
single write to the array???
but that applies to all RAID levels. 'tis common, so the biggest
bottleneck in RAID5 is CPU.
--
Paul Jakma [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP5 key: http
]), and also why Linux
software RAID5 does so well (cause it has Alpha/Pentium11 CPU's for
it's use)
--
Paul Jakma [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
Nothing increases your golf score like witnesses.
[1] Almost
) then
deliberately cripple it so that it could only act as a drive
controller then you are mad. :)
repeat after me:
hardware RAID controller == *complete computer* on a PCI card
regards,
--
Paul Jakma [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
in linux
If anyone hears about a Linux driver for this card, I'd like to know.
Cheers, Frank
--
Paul Jakma [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
I use not only all the brains I have, but all
%
2000 Seeks | 7.6 s | 264.4 s/s |0.0 % |0.5 % ---
---
--
Paul Jakma [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
Not only
, and there's even a GTK+ applet to view the
status of the array.
regards,
--
Paul Jakma [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
All science is either physics or stamp collecting.
-- Ernest Rutherford
is not very clear (at least, not to me) on this.
Thanks.
P.
Paul
Unix techy
is not very clear (at least, not to me) on this.
Thanks.
P.
Paul
Unix techy
on www.google.com/linux
--
Paul Jakma [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
When some people discover the truth, they just can't understand why
everybody isn't eager to hear it.
GFS link:
www.globalfilesystem.org
--
Paul Jakma [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
In the Halls of Justice the only justice is in the halls.
-- Lenny Bruce
holds a lot back. I think it's due a revamp for 2.5.
Thanks,
Larry
regards,
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
The only "intuitive"
as they are the ones with the best hot-swap support.
regards,
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
linux: because a PC is a terrible thing to waste
([EMAIL PROTECTED] put this on Tshirts in '93)
On Thursday, Sep 9, 1999, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Wed, 8 Sep 1999, Paul Jimenez wrote:
This patch is based on the md.c that shipped with the 2.2.11 kernel; it
calls md_stop() on all RAID partitions still around at shutdown/reboot
time, which allows one to have a small (non-RAID) /boot
This patch is based on the md.c that shipped with the 2.2.11 kernel; it
calls md_stop() on all RAID partitions still around at shutdown/reboot
time, which allows one to have a small (non-RAID) /boot partition with
a kernel on it and a larger (RAID1) partition that's /.
I'm a bit paranoid, so
RAID array md3
md: minimum _guaranteed_ reconstruction speed: 100 KB/sec.
md: using maximum available idle IO bandwith for reconstruction.
md: using 128k window.
thanks,
paul
it
look back at the /etc/raidtab file?
thanks,
paul
regards,
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
"I once witnessed a long-winded, month-long flamewar over the use of
mice vs. trackballs...It was very silly."
(By Matt Welsh)
a good UPS. :)
hth's.
regards,
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
FORTH IF HONK THEN
under 80MBs with
eight disks. More disks, more SCSI busses, whatever - the performance
doesn't improve.
regards,
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
In defeat
that one RAID-5 device is faster than 2 RAID-1 devices.
especially for writing. With RAID-1 you have write the same data to 2
drives. With RAID-5 you split one piece of data across drives.
(but if anyone has the time and equipment to test it out..)
regards,
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http
chunk size is probably a
tad too large, the machine blocks noticable when swapping. For swap
it'd probably be better to set it to 8 or 16k. (experimentation
needed.)
regards,
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
. With RAID-5 i have 3/4 of
the physical space available for swap.
seems a lot more efficient to me.
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
Some people pray for more than
On Tue, 13 Jul 1999, Paul Jakma wrote:
On Tue, 13 Jul 1999, Marc Mutz wrote:
Why does anybody want to use swap-on-RAID with any RAID level than 1?
Wouldn't it be much faster if you used multiple swap spaces?
Marc
cause i have 4 partitions dedicated to swap. with raid
. Not sure what to, maybe 2GB.
What's the point of running swap on RAID anyway?
what happens if the disk with your swap on it suddenly dies? your
machine dies too. with linux-raid it shouldn't.*
* but linux scsi isn't particularly robust though.
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http
ove example)
6. partition new disk.
7. raidhotadd.
We never.. never.. never.. ever.. reboot linux!!
(well unless the hardware is on fire or something. then ... maybe)
:)
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://ww
OS then you're toast).
uhmmm their NIC's are either Texas Instruments ThunderLan or
(recently) Intel EEpro.. should work fine with the plain linux
drivers.
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
idtab is setup as it states in the HOWTO. The mirror even seems active.
Thanks and have a great day! :-)
Paul
---
Paul B. Brown
Principle Operations Support Engineer
PSINet, Inc.
(703) 375-1894 - Voice
(703) 213-6148 - Pager
/etc/raidtab
mkraid -c /etc/raidtab
mkraid
mkraid -f
The response we get from each of these commands is:
Nothing to do.
We have also read through the available documentation (FAQ, HOWTO, manpage,
README, etc) to no avail. Can someone give us some advice?
Thanks gang,
Paul B. Brown
Principle
with linus.
i'm sticking with 2.2.7-ac1 :)
Anyone know whether 2.2.10-pre works?
And thanks to everybody for mailing me with the answer. appreciated.
regards,
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
2.2.8 or later, IT WILL HURT.
2.2.8 had a nasty block device problem which was solved in 2.9. What
other issues are there with 2.2.9?
(i've just gone and hand merged 2.2.9-ac1, raid0145 and devfs-v99.)
:(
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie
I was wondering if anyone could help me out. I am trying to convert to raid
my rh 6.0 installation. I have not patched the system since I believe 6.0 is
"raid aware". I have 4 SCSI disks and I would like to mirror them. I
have partitions on drives 1 and 2 and free space on 3 and 4.
I would like
to completion forever
Any ideas? I know there was some buffer changed in 2.2.9 perhaps that is
an issue?
did you merge in the include/linux/fs.h reject?
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
On Sun, 9 May 1999, Gulcu Ceki wrote:
On the other hand, if the intent is higher reliability, then one can
swap on a RAID-1 partition.
i wonder, can you have your swap on a raid5 partition? raid-1 seems
a bit of a waste of hdd space.
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http
protected.
We know raid1 works, but would swap on raid5? i hope it would, as
raid5 is less wasteful of disk space than raid1.
regards,
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortun
my e-mail server crashed a
couple of weeks ago. It was running raid 1 + 2.1.115, and had run for
several months without a problem before that.
-- Paul ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
how it got set on your box).
regards,
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
The more they over-think the plumbing the easier it is to stop up the drain.
On Fri, 23 Apr 1999, John Ronan wrote:
On 22-Apr-99 Paul Jakma wrote:
Ok I ran a few bonnies with differenc chunk sizes...
Raid5 running on 4 WDC AC31300R's UDMA... Seems to peak at 32k
chunks, 4K block size
i've done a bit of benching aswell. The most important (on ia32
depend on your particular files
and usage...
i tried this with raid0, and if bonnie is any guide, the optimal
configuration is 64k chunk size, 4k e2fs block size.
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
blocks [2/2] [UU]
md3 : active raid1 sdb6[1] sda6[0] 1052160 blocks [2/2] [UU]
md4 : active raid1 sdb7[1] sda7[0] 5180800 blocks [2/2] [UU]
md5 : active raid1 sdb8[1] sda8[0] 1052160 blocks [2/2] [UU]
unused devices: none
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
added with
mknod, the partitions are of type 0xFD (per the instructions on
automounting).
When I try to mkraid, it aborts. Any ideas on where to look to get this
array up and running?
Thanks!
Paul K. Witting
Manager of Information Systems
Cyveillance - Intelligent Internet Surveillance
[EMAIL
/
currently only supports "linear" and raid0. It'd be nice to see the
linux-raid and linux-lvm patches merged. They complement each other
very much. Anybody know if/when this will happen?
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.club
nice. but it's not in grub.
Shame pc bios's are so limited.
--
Paul Jakma
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hibernia.clubi.ie
PGP5 key: http://www.clubi.ie/jakma/publickey.txt
---
Fortune:
The trouble with money is it costs too much!
:
# RAID config file, Paul Hancock, 3/18/99
raiddev /dev/md1
raid-level 1
nr-raid-disks 2
nr-spare-disks 0
chunk-size 4
device /dev/sdb2
raid-disk 0
device
to where I might find more information on using Compaq
controllers for hardware RAID?
Thanks,
Kyle
hi kyle,
it was mentioned on freshmeat i believe. try searching there.
(i'd do it myself but my ISP's backbone to the US is shot at the
moment )
regards,
Paul.
--
Paul Jakma
things like diald,
sendmail, X.. machine is a bit hosed after this.
so the problem would seem to be with chunk sizes perhaps. rc5des
running constantly seems to aggravate it though.
Anyway, it's working fine with chunk=8 for me at the moment, with
rc5des. :)
regards,
Paul Jakma.
f I wasted anyone's time.
-- Paul ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
On Tue, 17 Nov 1998, Paul Hancock wrote:
Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1998 20:32:25 -0700 (MST)
From: Paul Hancock [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Compile problems
Dealing with linux-2.1.127 raid0145-199811
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