Thread (27 messages) 27 messages, 8 authors, 2013-07-09

Re: question about the best suited RAID level/layout

From: Brad Campbell <hidden>
Date: 2013-07-05 01:07:36

On 05/07/13 06:58, Christoph Anton Mitterer wrote:
I'd have even one more question here: Has anyone experience with my idea
of intentionally running devices of different vendors (Seagate, WD,
HGST)... for resilience reasons?... Does it work out as I plan, or are
there any hidden caveats I can't see which make the resilience (not the
performance) worse?
I've got both here. A large RAID-6 comprised entirely of single brand, 
single type consumer drives and a smaller RAID-10 built from a diverse 
selection. Both have had great reliability, so that's not really a good 
data point for you.

What I *have* found over the years is the importance of weeding out 
early failures. Before I commit a disk to service, I subject it to a 
couple of weeks of hard work. I usually knock up a quick and dirty bash 
script with multiple concurrent instances of dd reading and writing to 
differing parts of the disk simultaneously, with a bonnie++ run for good 
measure. With all this going on at the same time the drive mechanism 
gets a serious workout and the drive stays warmer than it will in actual 
service. If I have the chance, I do all the drives simultaneously and 
preferably in the machine they are going to spend the next couple of 
years. If I can't do that, then I have a burn-in chassis built from a 
retired server that can do 15 at a time.

This has proven quite effective in spotting the early life failures. I 
generally find (for consumer drives) if they pass this they'll last the 
3 years of 24/7 I use them for before I replace them. My enterprise 
drives are a different story, and I have some here with just over 38k 
hours on them. I'll probably replace them for bigger drives before they 
ever fail.

Regards,
Brad
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