From: Sander <sander@humilis.net>
To: Massimo Maggi <massimo@mmmm.it>
Cc: linux-btrfs@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: New idea about RAID and SSD
Date: Tue, 1 Sep 2009 15:05:46 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20090901130546.GA10305@cumulus> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4A9D1746.1020407@mmmm.it>
Hello Massimo,
Massimo Maggi wrote (ao):
> SSDs have low latency but a high price per GB,
> Traditional hard disks have high latency, but high sequential read/write
> speed and low price per GB.
> Is possibile to use a SSD for metadata, which requires many seeks and is
> relatively small, in a special "RAID mode" with a traditional hard disk
> for the extents of the real data?
> A cheap but performant SSD (maybe 32 GB) + a big and fast HD (maybe 1.5
> TB, or two in RAID0 - 3TB ), wouldn't create an array much cheaper than
> a ssd-only array of the same size, and much faster (in
> not-only-sequential workload) than one or two traditional HDs in RAID0?
> Would it work?
If you talk RAID0 (eg no redundancy), you could RAID0 one or several
traditional disks, and use the SSD as a journal device. That would be
ext3/4 only btw.
With mdadm you could create a RAID1 and use --write-mostly:
-W, --write-mostly
subsequent devices listed in a --build, --create, or --add com-
mand will be flagged as 'write-mostly'. This is valid for RAID1
only and means that the 'md' driver will avoid reading from
these devices if at all possible. This can be useful if mirror-
ing over a slow link.
Where the 'slow link' would be the traditional disk. But this is raid1 and
doesn't help in your case (but couldn't resist the need to mention it :-)
Sander
--
Humilis IT Services and Solutions
http://www.humilis.net
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-09-01 13:05 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2009-09-01 12:44 New idea about RAID and SSD Massimo Maggi
2009-09-01 13:05 ` Sander [this message]
2009-09-01 13:10 ` jim owens
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