This is an interesting discussion. It appears that there is indeed some work to
be done with manipulating spin up/down on subsections of an array, etc.
However, in terms of cost/performance for small systems, it may be simpler to
solve this with less programming and more hardware. The cost of a
Jim Sez:
> Like many others, I've come close to making a home
> NAS server based on
> ZFS and OpenSolaris. While this is not an enterprise
> solution with high IOPS
> expectation, but rather a low-power system for
> storing everything I have,
> I plan on cramming in some 6-10 5400RPM "Green"
> dr
On Nov 4, 2009, at 6:02 PM, Jim Klimov wrote:
> Thanks for the link, but the main concern in spinning down drives of a ZFS
> pool
> is that ZFS by default is not so idle. Every 5 to 30 seconds it closes a
> transaction
> group (TXG) which requires a synchronous write of metadata to disk.
I'm r
jimkli...@cos.ru said:
> Thanks for the link, but the main concern in spinning down drives of a ZFS
> pool is that ZFS by default is not so idle. Every 5 to 30 seconds it closes
> a transaction group (TXG) which requires a synchronous write of metadata to
> disk.
You know, it's just going to de
Thanks for the link, but the main concern in spinning down drives of a ZFS pool
is that ZFS by default is not so idle. Every 5 to 30 seconds it closes a
transaction
group (TXG) which requires a synchronous write of metadata to disk.
I mentioned reading many blogs/forums on the matter, and some
I read about some guy that shut off his RAID when he didnt use it. And he had a
large system disc he used for temporary storage. So he copied everything to the
temp storage and immediately shut down the raid.
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This message posted from opensolaris.org
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On Wed, November 4, 2009 15:36, Trevor Pretty wrote:
> You've been able to spin down drives since about Solaris 8.
And thanks for the link to the article.
The article specifies SAS and SCSI a lot; does this also apply to SATA?
Will anything in serving a ZFS filesystem out via in-kernel CIFS ha
Kim
You've been able to spin down drives since about Solaris 8.
http://www.sun.com/bigadmin/features/articles/disk_power_saving.jsp
Jim Klimov wrote:
Hello all.
Like many others, I've come close to making a home NAS server based on
ZFS and OpenSolaris. While this is not an enterpr
Hello all.
Like many others, I've come close to making a home NAS server based on
ZFS and OpenSolaris. While this is not an enterprise solution with high IOPS
expectation, but rather a low-power system for storing everything I have,
I plan on cramming in some 6-10 5400RPM "Green" drives with low