On Thu, Jan 8, 2009 at 10:01, Orvar Korvar <knatte_fnatte_tja...@yahoo.com> wrote: > Thank you. How does raidz2 compare to raid-2? Safer? Less safe? Raid-2 is much less used, for one, uses many more disks for parity, for two, and is much slower in any application I can think of. Suppose you have 11 100G disks. Raid-2 would use 7 for data and 4 for parity, total capacity 700G, and would be able to recover from any single bit flips per data row (e.g., if any disk were lost or corrupted (!), it could recover its contents). This is not done using checksums, but rather ECC. One could implement checksums on top of this, I suppose. A major downside of raid-2 is that "efficient" use of space only happens when the raid groups are of size 2**k-1 for some integer k; this is because the Hamming code includes parity bits at certain intervals (see [1]).
Raidz2, on the other hand, would take your 11 100G disks and use 9 for data and 2 for parity, and put checksums on blocks. This means that recovering any two corrupt or missing disks (as opposed to one with raid-2) is possible; with any two pieces of a block potentially damaged, one can calculate all the possibilities for what the block could have been before damage and accept the one whose calculated checksum matches the stored one. Thus, raidz2 is safer and more storage-efficient than raid-2. This is all mostly academic, as nobody uses raid-2. It's only as safe as raidz (can repair one error, or detect two) and space efficiency for normal-sized arrays is fairly atrocious. Use raidz{,2} and forget about it. Will [1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamming_code#General_algorithm _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss