Lev Serebryakov a écrit :
Hello, freebsd-stable.
  Does somebody use some software RAID5 on FreeBSD in real production
  system?

  I want to build storage server for my home: RAW photos, multi-layer
PhotoShop files and FLAC-encoded music consume a lot of space, and
they should be availible both from desktop & notebook.

  Also, all photo-content is unique, so I need some insuranse from
single HDD crash. I understand, that I will not safe from fire, PSU
failure and thing slike this.

  I selected hardware platform: Intel Q35-based MoBo with 6xSATA-II ports
(all of them is chipset-based, so no SiliconImage/JMicron/Whatever
crappy controllers), some low-end Core2Duo, 2Gb of memory.
  Storage will be 5x500Gb WD HDDs for RAID + one small HDD for boot, system,
swap, etc. I want to have 2Tb (ok, not real Tb, I know) of "protected"
storage.
  I want to have maximum speed via 1Gb network, because graphic files
are big and should open fast. Not as fast as local ones, I understand
that, but speeds about 12-15Mb/s is not enough for sure :)

  Only problem I see: which software RAID5 solution should I prefer?
FreeBSD-based, of course!

  I see these variants:

 (1) FreeBSD 6(7?) + graid3. Slow, one disk for checksums is bottleneck,
     as far as I understand.

 (2) FreeBSD 6(7?) + gvinum/radi5. Is it stable enough?! Is it complete?
     when I try it about 6 months ago in VMWare installation with 5
     virtual disks, I got panics and strange behaviour after "crashing"
     one of virtual disks.

 (3) FreeBSD 6(7?) + graid5. Again, is it stable enough? There are
     THREE versions of it. Which one should I prefer? There was long
     thread about it some times ago without any clear conclusion. Does
     something changed?

 (4) FreeBSD 7 + ZFS "zraid". And again: stability. Too many messages
     about locks, crashes, etc. Code is experemental. Is it only for
     32 bit systems?

 (5) Do I miss something?

 (6) Solaris + ZFS? I don't want it, I know a little about Solaris
     administaration, and I already have FreeBSD servers and routers.

  I know, that 3ware or Areca controllers are very good. I know, that
  "gmirror" is very stable. But these variants are too expensive for
  home server :(

  Does somebody use some software RAID5 on FreeBSD in real production?
  Any advices?
Hi !

I personally use the 3 option for my personal Home File Server. I got approximatly the same usage for the file server (mostly video, music, photo). I built my own about 12 month ago.
I reviewed the about the same variants as the one you propose :
(1) Discarded for performance issues. Raid3 is slow. Really.
(2) raid5/vinum is also slow. And as I understood at that time, recovery from lost hard drive wasn't easy enough for the freebsd niubee I was then. (4) ZFS wasn't there yet. But I did test it on a test VMWare, and wasn't convinced (mostly stability and memory issues).
So I use geom_raid5. I sticked to the main distributions, which seemed 
more stable at the moment. The kernel module is fairly simple to 
build/install. Performance is (very) good for a software raid.
I successfully switched the raid array from an i386 6.2-RELEASE to an an 
amd64 7.0-RELEASE (with motherboard and CPU change) without any assle.
For the moment, I use one big UFS+SU (and snapshots) on the whole array. 
I successfuly tried unpplugging then replugging on of the drives, 
suddent power loss, using the array with a missing disk (degraded mode). 
All did work fine. (still, I use an UPS on the file server).
The sole issue I had is with ataidle. I had to patch ata-disc.c to 
increase the IO timeout. Without, the raid5 module detected temporary 
disk loss and constantly launched rebuilds of the array.
With 7.0, I wondered if I should use gjournal, but I'm not sure if it's 
really the way to go on a file system dedicated to store many big files. 
So I stick to soft updates.
Current configuration is :
/ on a 2GB usb key
/tmp on memory
ports and source trees (and some portsnap stuff) on a small disk
4x250 GB sata for the raid5 array.
AMD A64 3200+ and 512 GB DDRII
Realtek Gigabit nics.

Copy from raid5 to /dev/null gives about 100MB/s
Copy from /dev/random to raid5 about 40MB/s

I use samba shares. I get about 40MB/s in both ways from another computer on the network (enabling jumbo-frames gives a big boost).
Hope my own story can help you in any way.

Regards,

Arnaud Houdelette

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