timwhit
Hairy Aussie
Though from what I've read, forecasts say that drives won't be "reasonable" again until probably 2013.
That sucks, I will definitely need more drives before that.
Though from what I've read, forecasts say that drives won't be "reasonable" again until probably 2013.
BD rips, at 5 - 15GB per title, are pretty rough on available storage.
I'm confused. On Intel's product page is written :When drives get reasonable again, I'll buy an Intel RES2SV240 ($200) and stick it in a secondary chassis.
When I look at the card, I see only six. NewEgg says six too.Eight SFF8087 SAS/SATA connectors for attaching up to 24 targets or initiators
FreeNAS RAIDZ performance is definitely bound up by RAM. With a total of 20GB RAM, I'm seeing 130MB/sec writes over NFS with dual gigabit. This might be of some interest to folks who get here from Google, given my previous post on the matter.
Did you have a Windows Server at the time with an ungodly amount of RAM?
I didn't even have an idea GbE went that high for real world stuff. Theoretical is what 125MB/s? This is a regular windows share we are talking about?
This is 2008R2 Standard, with the "File Server" and "Indexing" roles added. I plan to also make it an iSCSI target for more VMWare foolery.
Edit: If that caching works with the VMs it could finally get me off my SSD DAS thing.
That should be enough for smaller burst transfers (2GB+? How much free RAM does the machine typically have?)No, only 6GB. I don't know how much is needed before a reasonable amount of caching can take affect.
I've seen Win7 report bursts up to 127MB/s, but I do not trust those numbers too much.I've seen rates getting up close to the theoretical max (111MB/sec) in my own NAS.
I am not having good luck with trunked GbE lines, performance is not always there. 10Gb is getting reasonable-ish, except for the switches. Might just go direct to the VM machines.Would it help if you used a dedicated switch and trunked four GigE links to a quad-port nic on both ends? Or, if you can spring for it, a single 10Gb adapter...
Yup. Expensive for what it is, and ties up the whole machine. This way I can add other storage loads (large but not intensive) to the same box.Does this mean you are going to forgo using that VMWare storage appliance?