From: Ryan Bourgeois <rgb005@latech.edu>
To: Danny Cox <Danny.Cox@ECWeb.com>
Cc: Linux IDE List <linux-ide@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: Which SATA Combos To Consider?
Date: Thu, 17 Feb 2005 18:25:26 -0600 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <421535F6.80609@latech.edu> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1108669364.3604.80.camel@vom>
Danny Cox wrote:
> I've been mostly lurking here for awhile now, just seeing how things
>are going. I've seen various drives on a blacklist, and various
>controllers that do this or that well, but have problems doing foo.
>There also seem to have been a Strange Interaction as well, but that's a
>fuzzy memory at best.
>
> So, my question is: if YOU were to purchase an SATA setup brand new,
>what would you specify? Which drives, motherboards, and PCI cards would
>you recommend that just work?
>
> I don't even mean "work like a Mercedes", by which I mean almost
>perfection. I mean like a Chevy. I don't mind a little tinkering to
>get it right, but I want my disk subsystem to be solid thereafter! I've
>got important stuff here! Like my wife's backup; NEVER lose your wife's
>backup (shudder)!
>
> If SATA isn't ready for consumerdom, I'd like to know that too. This
>just isn't for Jeff and Bart either. I'd like to hear success stories
>from those whose systems just hum along all the time!
>
> Thanks in advance!
>
>
>
On my file server I run the Highpoint RocketRAID 1640. It's a software
RAID five card. Basically it's just a PCI card with two HPT374 chips
each with two SATA plugs (a total of four plugs). So it's a no frills
PATA card with SATA converters onboard. I run three Western Digital
120gb SATA drives on it with a Linux Software RAID 5 array on them.
Aside from the fact that it's a PATA card at heart (so it doesn't use
libata), my only complaint is that it's slow. It's stable as a rock,
though, I've had no problems with the card or drives.
I have a Promise SX4 that I tried. I had those same three drives
connected to it, but I was having some problems with the array when I
was using it. It had a tendency to corrupt the filesystem, for some
reason. I was having other problems at the time, though, so it could be
unrelated to the card I was using. If I get time and money I may try
and set up an array on the card for testing.
Anyways, out of personal preference, I go with Western Digital hard
drives. For SATA cards, the Promise TX cards seem pretty reliable. I
have an onboard TX2 on my main machine running a WD Raptor. I've had
absolutely no problems with it and libata. Or in Windows, for that matter.
I haven't used any other cards or drives, so I cannot offer anything in
that direction.
-Ryan Bourgeois
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2005-02-18 0:29 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 27+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2005-02-16 4:28 libata oops 2.6.11-rc4 yesterdays BK Brad Campbell
2005-02-16 11:01 ` Brad Campbell
2005-02-16 17:25 ` Jeff Garzik
2005-02-16 20:54 ` Brad Campbell
2005-02-16 21:40 ` Andy Warner
2005-02-16 22:47 ` Jeff Garzik
2005-02-16 23:49 ` Andy Warner
2005-02-16 23:58 ` Jeff Garzik
2005-02-17 0:20 ` Andy Warner
2005-02-17 5:08 ` Jeff Garzik
2005-02-17 14:59 ` Andy Warner
2005-02-17 19:13 ` Jeff Garzik
2005-02-17 19:25 ` Andy Warner
2005-02-17 22:36 ` Jeff Garzik
2005-02-17 19:42 ` Which SATA Combos To Consider? Danny Cox
2005-02-17 20:55 ` Jeff Garzik
2005-02-18 0:25 ` Ryan Bourgeois [this message]
2005-02-18 0:44 ` Johny Ågotnes
2005-02-18 0:52 ` Jeff Garzik
2005-02-21 23:50 ` Johny Ågotnes
2005-02-21 23:50 ` Johny Ågotnes
2005-02-22 1:55 ` Johny Ågotnes
2005-02-18 6:13 ` libata oops 2.6.11-rc4 yesterdays BK Brad Campbell
2005-02-19 4:14 ` Brad Campbell
2005-02-21 4:27 ` Brad Campbell
2005-02-22 10:09 ` Brad Campbell
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2005-02-21 9:25 Which SATA Combos To Consider? linux
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