RAID 5

Bozo

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Feb 12, 2002
Messages
4,396
Location
Twilight Zone
I have a 3Ware SATA controller card and 3 160GB hard drives. I would like to set these up in a RAID 5 configeration. Only one small problem. I have 2 WD hard drives and 1 Seagate hard drive. I know you are not supposed to mix the hard drives, but has anybody ever done this?

Thanks,
Bozo :joker:
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
Joined
Jan 17, 2002
Messages
22,261
Location
I am omnipresent
Yes.

You will be sad when one of the drives fails and the controller won't resync on the replacement drive.
 

ddrueding

Fixture
Joined
Feb 4, 2002
Messages
19,728
Location
Horsens, Denmark
Ditto. Keep them the same. You could do a RAID 1 with the WD drives; then they might be as reliable as the Seagate, and you have the same 320GB of fairly reliable storage ;)
 

Stereodude

Not really a
Joined
Jan 22, 2002
Messages
10,865
Location
Michigan
Yes.

You will be sad when one of the drives fails and the controller won't resync on the replacement drive.
Except the 3Ware cards don't care. It will use any 3 drives and work based on the smallest of the 3 drives. I've replaced two of the 200GB WD in my 6 drive RAID-5 array with 250GB drives and had no issues.
 

Howell

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Feb 24, 2003
Messages
4,740
Location
Chattanooga, TN
Except the 3Ware cards don't care. It will use any 3 drives and work based on the smallest of the 3 drives. I've replaced two of the 200GB WD in my 6 drive RAID-5 array with 250GB drives and had no issues.

Were they 250G WDs or.....?
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
Joined
Jan 17, 2002
Messages
22,261
Location
I am omnipresent
Except the 3Ware cards don't care...

In my experience, RAID5 arrays, whether hardware or software, wind up having issues when all the drives are not the same. Generally the RAID5s I've dealt with have been SCSI arrays on OEM controllers (IBM, Dell, HP), but mixed-drive arrays seem to be problematic generally.
I've seen enough issues that I wouldn't advise anyone to try building one that way. After all, the data you're storing was important enough to store on an array in the first place, right?
 

Pradeep

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Jan 21, 2002
Messages
3,845
Location
Runny glass
I wouldn't even mix different firmware revisions of the same drive on an array, if at all avoidable.
 

Stereodude

Not really a
Joined
Jan 22, 2002
Messages
10,865
Location
Michigan
I've had to sit through the painful process at work (several times!) where the RAID5 array was rebuilding itself after a drive failure. Basically, no LAN connectivity for the day==no work for the day.

RAID10 if you must RAID
My RAID-5 array is usable while it's rebuilding, so I'm not sure what the problem is.
 

Bozo

Storage? I am Storage!
Joined
Feb 12, 2002
Messages
4,396
Location
Twilight Zone
Of the few RAID 5 rebuilds I've been involved with, you could still access the server, although it was slow. IBMs
The servers with Seagate Cheetahs, there was hardly any slowdown at all. And the rebuild was fast. (Adaptec controller)

Bozo :joker:
 
Top