Re: With 4 disks should I go for RAID 5 or RAID 10
От | Shane Ambler |
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Тема | Re: With 4 disks should I go for RAID 5 or RAID 10 |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 47735156.2080403@Sheeky.Biz обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: With 4 disks should I go for RAID 5 or RAID 10 (Mark Mielke <mark@mark.mielke.cc>) |
Ответы |
Re: With 4 disks should I go for RAID 5 or RAID 10
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Список | pgsql-performance |
Mark Mielke wrote: > Shane Ambler wrote: >> So in a perfect setup (probably 1+0) 4x 300MB/s SATA drives could >> deliver 1200MB/s of data to RAM, which is also assuming that all 4 >> channels have their own data path to RAM and aren't sharing. >> (anyone know how segregated the on board controllers such as these >> are?) >> (do some pci controllers offer better throughput?) >> We all know that doesn't happen in the real world ;-) Let's say we >> are restricted to 80% - 1000MB/s - and some of that (10%) gets used >> by the system - so we end up with 900MB/s delivered off disk to >> postgres - that would still be more than the perfect rate at which >> 2x 300MB/s drives can deliver. > > I achieve something closer to +20% - +60% over the theoretical > performance of a single disk with my four disk RAID 1+0 partitions. If a good 4 disk SATA RAID 1+0 can achieve 60% more throughput than a single SATA disk, what sort of percentage can be achieved from a good SCSI controller with 4 disks in RAID 1+0? Are we still hitting the bus limits at this point or can a SCSI RAID still outperform in raw data throughput? I would still think that SCSI would still provide the better reliability that it always has, but performance wise is it still in front of SATA? -- Shane Ambler pgSQL (at) Sheeky (dot) Biz Get Sheeky @ http://Sheeky.Biz
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