The 7200.12 put through it's paces.
2 plater 1 TB.
http://www.techreport.com/articles.x/16472
Hit or miss...
2 plater 1 TB.
http://www.techreport.com/articles.x/16472
Hit or miss...
Yes. It doesn't sound bad; just not exceptionally good. Basically average. Looking at the performance spread on all of the drives in the tests I really don't think any of them are clear losers. Average performance is pretty good and changing brands or models only helps (or hurts) by any significant amount for a very few specific things.Certainly a mixed bag from the review.
really isn't much of a reason for not producing SATA drives at 15K speeds
I wonder if that's true. I think the industry has worked together to only progress at a certain rate, a profitable rate. I think the great increase in capacity, and speed in platter drives is being driven by the threat of SSDs taking over the market. When you think about it, really isn't much of a reason for not producing SATA drives at 15K speeds, and, given the technology, I don't see why they can't move data at near 150 MB/sec, and, access times around 2 ms. You raid 0 two of those, and, you have a drive setup that's going to be very close to SSD's performance wise, at much less cost, with way more capacity...
If a 7200 rpm drive can do 110 mb/sec, and the goal is around 200 mb/sec, I suspect that we will see developments that give platter drives performance around the same sustained data transfer rates, and, the cost point will be better.
My biggest problem has been the inability to script it so as to be impossible to mess up royally by a true moron: That departioning step is an unacceptable risk when a moron can pick any partition to kill and I havent been able to script choosing the correct drive to departition.
Yep, we have a few systems with RAID1 as a backup in addition to availability. We pull a drive and set it on a shelf. Insert a new drive and let the array rebuild. The drive on the shelf becomes our backup.
This type of backup can be performed online or off, and the rebuild rate can be set so as not to impact normal operation. Much faster and easier than using traditional imaging software.
Depending on your backup requirements you could fail and spin down the drive in software, rather than physically pulling it. This would allow automated backups without human intervention.
How do you deal with the need for the replacement drive be unpartitioned?