* RAID5 over Serial-ATA success stories? @ 2004-01-07 21:36 Daniel Brahneborg 2004-01-07 21:56 ` Måns Rullgård 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Daniel Brahneborg @ 2004-01-07 21:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-raid, linux-ide Hi, I'd like to hear some success stories for RAID5 on Serial-ATA disks. Which Serial-ATA card are you using? Do you get decent performance? Is it stable with DMA enabled? Do you use the 2.4 or 2.6 kernel? I know this much: It doesn't work with Silicon Image. It doesn't work with VIA (yet, anyway). It might work with HighPoint. It probably works with Promise. I don't know if there's a driver for Adaptec. In case I have to replace my Silicon Image card, what should I replace it with? I'm currently leaning towards Promise TX4 (or TX2 if the VIA driver is completed). Lots of thanks, /Basic ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: RAID5 over Serial-ATA success stories? 2004-01-07 21:36 RAID5 over Serial-ATA success stories? Daniel Brahneborg @ 2004-01-07 21:56 ` Måns Rullgård 2004-01-08 7:57 ` Daniel Brahneborg 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Måns Rullgård @ 2004-01-07 21:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-raid; +Cc: linux-ide Daniel Brahneborg <daniel.com@wtnord.net> writes: > Hi, > > I'd like to hear some success stories for RAID5 on Serial-ATA disks. > Which Serial-ATA card are you using? Do you get decent performance? > Is it stable with DMA enabled? Do you use the 2.4 or 2.6 kernel? > > I know this much: > > It doesn't work with Silicon Image. What doesn't work? There are drivers, at least in 2.6. Raid should care about what sort of disks you use. > It doesn't work with VIA (yet, anyway). > It might work with HighPoint. I've run RAID5 on a Highpoint RocketRAID 1540. I used ATA disks with SATA converters, though. Works with both 2.4 and 2.6. > It probably works with Promise. > I don't know if there's a driver for Adaptec. Which Adaptec card? The 12xx cards are fakeraid, but are supported as normal cards. The 24xx cards are true hardware RAID cards. Linux drivers exist for these, too. > In case I have to replace my Silicon Image card, what should I replace > it with? I'm currently leaning towards Promise TX4 (or TX2 if the VIA > driver is completed). I stay as far away as I can from Promise and VIA. Anything is usually better than those two. -- Måns Rullgård mru@kth.se - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-raid" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: RAID5 over Serial-ATA success stories? 2004-01-07 21:56 ` Måns Rullgård @ 2004-01-08 7:57 ` Daniel Brahneborg 2004-01-08 8:06 ` Måns Rullgård 2004-01-08 11:48 ` A.J.Dawson 0 siblings, 2 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Daniel Brahneborg @ 2004-01-08 7:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Måns Rullgård; +Cc: linux-raid, linux-ide Thanks for the feedback, it's very valuable to me. On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 10:56:32PM +0100, Måns Rullgård wrote: > Daniel Brahneborg <daniel.com@wtnord.net> writes: > > > I'd like to hear some success stories for RAID5 on Serial-ATA disks. > > Which Serial-ATA card are you using? Do you get decent performance? > > Is it stable with DMA enabled? Do you use the 2.4 or 2.6 kernel? > > > > I know this much: > > > > It doesn't work with Silicon Image. > > What doesn't work? There are drivers, at least in 2.6. Raid should > care about what sort of disks you use. When using it for normal disks e2fsck reports bad blocks all over the disk. When used for RAID, I get corrupted data. Not much, maybe every second time for a file of 500MB. This is with the IDE driver. With the SCSI driver, my computer completely freezes when I activate my second network card (as I reported earlier, unfortunately still without a solution). RAID might work with that driver, but unless the network card problem is solved, that doesn't help me. > > It doesn't work with VIA (yet, anyway). > > It might work with HighPoint. > > I've run RAID5 on a Highpoint RocketRAID 1540. I used ATA disks with > SATA converters, though. Works with both 2.4 and 2.6. Sounds good to hear. It's the second cheapest card for me. > > It probably works with Promise. > > I don't know if there's a driver for Adaptec. > > Which Adaptec card? The 12xx cards are fakeraid, but are supported as > normal cards. The 24xx cards are true hardware RAID cards. Linux > drivers exist for these, too. It's the 12xx cards that I'm looking at. I don't want hardware RAID, since hardware RAID5 costs an infinite amount of money. > > In case I have to replace my Silicon Image card, what should I replace > > it with? I'm currently leaning towards Promise TX4 (or TX2 if the VIA > > driver is completed). > > I stay as far away as I can from Promise and VIA. Anything is usually > better than those two. Why the warning about Promise? The reason I want the VIA driver to work is that I've got two VIA connectors on the motherboard, so I only need a 2 port SATA card. /Basic ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: RAID5 over Serial-ATA success stories? 2004-01-08 7:57 ` Daniel Brahneborg @ 2004-01-08 8:06 ` Måns Rullgård 2004-01-08 8:27 ` Daniel Brahneborg 2004-01-08 11:48 ` A.J.Dawson 1 sibling, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Måns Rullgård @ 2004-01-08 8:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Daniel Brahneborg; +Cc: linux-raid, linux-ide Daniel Brahneborg <basic@wtnord.net> writes: > Thanks for the feedback, it's very valuable to me. > > On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 10:56:32PM +0100, Måns Rullgård wrote: >> Daniel Brahneborg <daniel.com@wtnord.net> writes: >> >> > I'd like to hear some success stories for RAID5 on Serial-ATA disks. >> > Which Serial-ATA card are you using? Do you get decent performance? >> > Is it stable with DMA enabled? Do you use the 2.4 or 2.6 kernel? >> > >> > I know this much: >> > >> > It doesn't work with Silicon Image. >> >> What doesn't work? There are drivers, at least in 2.6. Raid should >> care about what sort of disks you use. > > When using it for normal disks e2fsck reports bad blocks all > over the disk. When used for RAID, I get corrupted data. Not > much, maybe every second time for a file of 500MB. > This is with the IDE driver. With the SCSI driver, my computer > completely freezes when I activate my second network card (as I > reported earlier, unfortunately still without a solution). > RAID might work with that driver, but unless the network card > problem is solved, that doesn't help me. That sounds rather odd. Have you reported this to the appropriate places? >> > It doesn't work with VIA (yet, anyway). >> > It might work with HighPoint. >> >> I've run RAID5 on a Highpoint RocketRAID 1540. I used ATA disks with >> SATA converters, though. Works with both 2.4 and 2.6. > > Sounds good to hear. It's the second cheapest card for me. Beware that several people have reported some rather strange problems with the Highpoint cards. You should get a deal to take it back if it doesn't work. >> > It probably works with Promise. >> > I don't know if there's a driver for Adaptec. >> >> Which Adaptec card? The 12xx cards are fakeraid, but are supported as >> normal cards. The 24xx cards are true hardware RAID cards. Linux >> drivers exist for these, too. > > It's the 12xx cards that I'm looking at. I don't want hardware > RAID, since hardware RAID5 costs an infinite amount of money. Not really. The Adaptec 24xx cards cost about the same as the disks you attach to them. I ordered one from a while ago, but the shop went bankrupt before I got it, or at least their web site disappeared and they stopped answering mail or phone calls. >> > In case I have to replace my Silicon Image card, what should I replace >> > it with? I'm currently leaning towards Promise TX4 (or TX2 if the VIA >> > driver is completed). >> >> I stay as far away as I can from Promise and VIA. Anything is usually >> better than those two. > > Why the warning about Promise? I've had some bad experience with them, that's all. They appear to be incompatible with Alpha machines, but probably work better in PCs. > The reason I want the VIA driver to work is that I've got two VIA > connectors on the motherboard, so I only need a 2 port SATA card. From what I've heard, VIA have improved a bit of late, but they used to have a rather bad reputation. I don't know anything about the drivers, though. -- Måns Rullgård mru@kth.se ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: RAID5 over Serial-ATA success stories? 2004-01-08 8:06 ` Måns Rullgård @ 2004-01-08 8:27 ` Daniel Brahneborg 0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Daniel Brahneborg @ 2004-01-08 8:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Måns Rullgård; +Cc: Daniel Brahneborg, linux-raid, linux-ide On Thu, Jan 08, 2004 at 09:06:46AM +0100, Måns Rullgård wrote: > Daniel Brahneborg <basic@wtnord.net> writes: > >> > It doesn't work with Silicon Image. > >> > >> What doesn't work? There are drivers, at least in 2.6. Raid should > >> care about what sort of disks you use. > > > > When using it for normal disks e2fsck reports bad blocks all > > over the disk. When used for RAID, I get corrupted data. Not > > much, maybe every second time for a file of 500MB. > > This is with the IDE driver. With the SCSI driver, my computer > > completely freezes when I activate my second network card (as I > > reported earlier, unfortunately still without a solution). > > RAID might work with that driver, but unless the network card > > problem is solved, that doesn't help me. > > That sounds rather odd. Have you reported this to the appropriate > places? I emailed the persons in the MAINTAINERS file that seemed relevant (Jeff Garzik, mainly). I don't really know where else to go, I'm afraid. > >> > It doesn't work with VIA (yet, anyway). > >> > It might work with HighPoint. > >> > >> I've run RAID5 on a Highpoint RocketRAID 1540. I used ATA disks with > >> SATA converters, though. Works with both 2.4 and 2.6. > > > > Sounds good to hear. It's the second cheapest card for me. > > Beware that several people have reported some rather strange problems > with the Highpoint cards. You should get a deal to take it back if it > doesn't work. I buy most things from komplett.se, they're nice with returns. > >> > I don't know if there's a driver for Adaptec. > >> > >> Which Adaptec card? The 12xx cards are fakeraid, but are supported as > >> normal cards. The 24xx cards are true hardware RAID cards. Linux > >> drivers exist for these, too. > > > > It's the 12xx cards that I'm looking at. I don't want hardware > > RAID, since hardware RAID5 costs an infinite amount of money. > > Not really. The Adaptec 24xx cards cost about the same as the disks > you attach to them. I ordered one from a while ago, but the shop went > bankrupt before I got it, or at least their web site disappeared and > they stopped answering mail or phone calls. The Adaptec card I found would cost $250, which is about $200 more than I can spend on it. If I can't get RAID5 to work I'd rather buy more disks and do RAID10. > >> > In case I have to replace my Silicon Image card, what should I replace > >> > it with? I'm currently leaning towards Promise TX4 (or TX2 if the VIA > >> > driver is completed). > >> > >> I stay as far away as I can from Promise and VIA. Anything is usually > >> better than those two. > > > > Why the warning about Promise? > > I've had some bad experience with them, that's all. They appear to be > incompatible with Alpha machines, but probably work better in PCs. I have a PC, so I'm hoping for the best. I'll still make sure that I can return it if it fails. /Basic - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-raid" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: RAID5 over Serial-ATA success stories? 2004-01-08 7:57 ` Daniel Brahneborg 2004-01-08 8:06 ` Måns Rullgård @ 2004-01-08 11:48 ` A.J.Dawson 1 sibling, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: A.J.Dawson @ 2004-01-08 11:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Daniel Brahneborg; +Cc: Måns Rullgård, linux-raid, linux-ide On Thu, 8 Jan 2004, Daniel Brahneborg wrote: > > Which Adaptec card? The 12xx cards are fakeraid, but are supported as > > normal cards. The 24xx cards are true hardware RAID cards. Linux > > drivers exist for these, too. I've used a couple of the 2400A cards for a while under Linux (SuSE 8.2) with mixed results - one works fine in RAID 5 mode (4x 120Gb disks), though it is very slow (typical sustained transfer on about 10Mb/s). The other is a completely different story. It keeps dropping disks from the array that subsequently test out to be perfectly okay. It also has a nasty habit of not letting me rebuild the array even after putting a new disk in. I get a 'missing component' error that even Adaptec seem to know nothing about (well, they've not bothered answering any of my e-mails about it*). This means that I have to rebuild the array again from scratch (build + verify = a complete day) and then restore the data from backup. Out of four disks that have been dropped from the array recently, three tested fine. On more than one occasion it has also given me a double disk failure within a couple of hours, not enough time to complete the rebuild for the first drive before the second one 'fails'. Again, drives subsequently tested out fine. The end result is that I got so fed up with it happening that I took the card out and dropped it into a drawer. I've replaced it with a couple of software mirroed 250Gb drives which (so far) seem to be working fine and give me a lot fewer headaches! I'd not recommend this card to *anyone* any more. * I'm pretty annoyed with Adaptec about this one - I've not even had a 'we don't know the answer' e-mail from them. I've tried eveything that I could think of including replacing all of the cables, updating the firmware on the drives (WD), hard resetting the 2400A, updating the firmware and SMOR (twice) and replacing the cache memory. I've told Adaptec about everything that I have tried and they have not even had the courtesy to reply to me. Anyone at Adaptec care to comment? Regards Dr. Andy Dawson A.J.Dawson@Bradford.ac.uk http://www.mossie.org http://www.museum-explorer.org.uk Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2004-01-08 11:48 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2004-01-07 21:36 RAID5 over Serial-ATA success stories? Daniel Brahneborg 2004-01-07 21:56 ` Måns Rullgård 2004-01-08 7:57 ` Daniel Brahneborg 2004-01-08 8:06 ` Måns Rullgård 2004-01-08 8:27 ` Daniel Brahneborg 2004-01-08 11:48 ` A.J.Dawson
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