On 04/13/12 2:59 PM, Frank Cox wrote:
> I just ordered  a new machine that's destined to become a Centos 6 application
> server for a publishing company, and decided to get one with a 40GB SSD as 
> well
> as a standard hard drive.
>
> I'm thinking that I can put most of the operating system on that drive and 
> have
> the home directories and whatnot on the regular hard drive.  Are there any
> pitfalls lying in wait for an unwary person like me when setting this thing 
> up?
>
> Further, I suspect that if that thing rattles along like I think it should 
> I'll
> probably want to add a SSD to my own desktop machine here.  Since this 
> computer
> is already set up with the default Centos 6 partitioning system on a single 
> hard
> drive (/boot, /home and /) is there an easy way to transfer the OS to the SSD 
> or
> would I be better off reformatting this thing and starting over from scratch 
> if
> I want to have a SSD for my boot and OS drive?

a server typically makes very little access of the system drive once the 
OS and services are loaded...   sure, the boot time will be hugely sped 
up, but how often do you reboot a production server?

typically, the most important storage IO function on an application 
server is the database performance, and this requires a device with 
strong random write performance.



-- 
john r pierce                            N 37, W 122
santa cruz ca                         mid-left coast

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