
2) Stick with RAID10 or RAID6. Stay away from RAID5 b/c obvious reasons (double-fault is going to kill your data).
Moderators: anton (staff), art (staff), Max (staff), Anatoly (staff)
sielbear wrote:BTW - we will be setting up a CDP volume on the SATA drives to mirror the SSDs. That should provide decent protection from an instantaneous failure. Additionally, the virtual servers are being backed up to a third device with Shadow Protect.
sielbear wrote:I'm really glad you chimed in - I was just going to ask 1.) is it possible to have a CDP / Snapshot volume that's a RAID1 mirror? 2.) If not, am I better off with a RAID1 mirror or CDP / Snapshot with point in time recovery options?
Lastly, is it possible to have CDP / Snapshot functionality residing on a second physical volume? I.e. use SSDs for web server and write point in time backups to the SATA volume?
Solid positive- iSCSI
Any drives, positive- accepts standard off the shelf SATA drives
More dependent on the OS you will run, if it does recognize it correctly - StarWind will too.- accepts drives of all different sizes (for example, so I can join a 4TB drive to an already built array or 2TB drives when those become available someday)
You will be able to extend the targets you have created before. Physical storage extension may be limited only by the hardware.- allows you to add drives to the array any time you like (ie I can expand an already built array)
More hardware dependent, but we're already made the mirroring functionality between physical boxes.Would be nice
- expandable (ie can chain multiple chassis)
Hmm, not sure if i got this correctly (if you mean hard disks - this also depends on the servers)- hot pluggable
About 99% will be ok ?:)- utilizes all available space on each drive even if drives are different sizes
Easy-to-use, centralized and intuitive. You can even manage your infrastructure from a netbook while having a cocktail on the beach.- decent management UI
We've got it- support for RAID-0, 1, 5, 6, 10, 50
Now only one available, we'll make 2 more in future- can have multiple spares
Of course- can create multiple arrays within a single chassis
It's also on the OS level- accepts SATA and SAS drives