Ahmed Kamal wrote: > > > So, performance aside, does SAS have other benefits ? Data > integrity ? How would a 8 raid1 sata compare vs another 8 smaller > SAS disks in raidz(2) ? > Like apples and pomegranates. Both should be able to saturate a > GbE link. > > > You're the expert, but isn't the 100M/s for streaming not random > read/write. For that, I suppose the disk drops to around 25M/s which > is why I was mentioning 4 sata disks. > > When I was asking for comparing the 2 raids, It's was aside from > performance, basically sata is obviously cheaper, it will saturate the > gig link, so performance yes too, so the question becomes which has > better data protection ( 8 sata raid1 or 8 sas raidz2)
Good question. Since you are talking about different disks, the vendor specs are different. The 500 GByte Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 I described above is rated with an MTBF of 750,000 hours, even though it comes in either a SATA or SAS interface -- but that isn't so interesting. A 450 GByte Seagate Cheetah 15k.6 (SAS) has a rated MTBF of 1.6M hours. Putting that into RAIDoptimizer we see: Disk RAID MTTDL[1](yrs) MTTDL[2](yrs) ---------------------------------------------------- Barracuda 1+0 284,966 5,351 z2 180,663,117 6,784,904 Cheetah 1+0 1,316,385 126,839 z2 1,807,134,968 348,249,968 For ZFS, 50% space used, logistical MTTR=24 hours, mirror resync time = 60 GBytes/hr In general, (2-way) mirrors are single parity, raidz2 is double parity. If you use a triple mirror, then the numbers will be closer to the raidz2 numbers. For explanations of these models, see my blog, http://blogs.sun.com/relling/entry/a_story_of_two_mttdl -- richard _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss