I built an Asus A8N SLI Deluxe based system and installed FreeBSD-6.1-BETA1 on it. This works well enough. Now I am looking for a decent RAID5 solution. This motherboard has two SATA RAID controllers. But one does only RAID1. The other supports RAID5 but seems to require s/w assistance from windows driver. The BIOS does let you designate a set of disks as a raid5 group but Freebsd does not recognize it as a group in any case.
I noticed that vinum is gone from -current and we have gvinum now but it does not implement all of the vinum commands. But that is ok if it provides what I need. I played with it a little bit. Its sequential read performance is ok (I am using 3 disks for RAID5 and the read rate is twice the speed of one disk as expected). But the write rate is abysmal! I get about 12.5MB/s or about 1/9 of the read rate. So what gives? Are there some magic stripe sizes for better performance? I used a stripe size of 279k as per vinum recommendation. Theoretically the sequential write rate should be same or higher than the sequential read rate. Given an N+1 disk array, for N blocks reads you XOR N + 1 blocks and compare the result to 0 but for N block writes you XOR N blocks. So there is less work for large writes. Which leads me to ask: is gvinum stable enough for real use or should I just get a h/w RAID card? If the latter, any recommendations? What I'd like: Critical: - RAID5 - good write performance - orderly shutdown (I noticed vinum stop command is gone but may be it is not needed?) - quick recovery from a system crash. It shouldn't have to rebuild the whole array. - parity check on reads (a crash may have rendered a stripe inconsistent) - must not correct bad parity by rewriting a stripe Nice to have: - ability to operate in "degraded" mode, where one of the disks is dead. - ability to rebuild the array in background - commands to take a disk offline, associate a spare with a particular disk - use a spare drive effectively - allow a bad parity stripe for future writes - allow rewriting parity under user control. Thanks! _______________________________________________ freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"