The Software RAID Inflection Point
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@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
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@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
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@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
This might be doable for a small set of hardware, but there is a huge set of hardware out there, and every time a new one comes out, the software RAID team would have to do an update. This also requires that the FOSS guys get the needed specs either because the hardware vendors give them out, or the FOSS community hacks it's way to finding them.
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@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
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@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@scottalanmiller With Storage Spaces being "new" & VMware having no SW RAID, I'm surprised that no one has tried/attempted to make MD RAID 'easier/user friendly/simpler' (insert your fav term) to use & implement.
With the abundance of bigger, faster, cheaper SSDs & CPUs...this seems like a good time for MD RAID to be popular?
Porting something at that layer is difficult and would probably prove to be unreliable without a large corporate backer to do it and none have that interest. For VMware it matters none as customers looking to use RAID are not paying customer so there is no business reason to add the cost and risk of porting MD (they could easily violate GPL in doing so, we well.) Microsoft already has a product that they want to promote and MD RAID would flag them as believing it to be a failure. Plus MD RAID is written to work on Linux, not Windows, porting it might involve starting over.
Basically, no commercial vendor has any business reason to care about getting good RAID working on these systems and no hobbyist would have a real incentive nor would you want to trust the "one guy in the basement" system for your core, underlying storage for niche deployments. It's just asking for trouble.
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@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Why is ML still recommending HW RAID?
https://mangolassi.it/topic/12043/why-the-smb-still-needs-hardware-raid/
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@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@dafyre said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Blind swap isn't an issue with hardware raid, and in general, I think, for SMBs, at least, HW raid win's because of that.
Agreed, but if MD is "better", why recommend a solution that is not as good!
Because you have to say "better", not just better. It's different. Software RAID is cheaper, faster and more flexible. But hardware RAID is simpler and better understood and when it comes to storage in the SMB, that's what matters most. Faster is of basically no importance in the SMB space; everyone thinks that it is, but it just isn't.
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@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
Actually they can't, because they don't know the use case. It's not about controlling all the hardware, it's about controlling everything from the disk to the application. Hardware RAID does it by pre-determining how it will be used.
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@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
Exactly. It's that one is general purpose that makes it complicated.
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@scottalanmiller said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
Actually they can't, because they don't know the use case. It's not about controlling all the hardware, it's about controlling everything from the disk to the application.
What do you mean that they don't know the use case...?
Does it matter? We just want a way to flash the "help me" light on a dying/dead disk, lol.
Would that not be something controllable by the firmware of the HD?
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@dafyre said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@scottalanmiller said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
Actually they can't, because they don't know the use case. It's not about controlling all the hardware, it's about controlling everything from the disk to the application.
What do you mean that they don't know the use case...?
Does it matter? We just want a way to flash the "help me" light on a dying/dead disk, lol.
Would that not be something controllable by the firmware of the HD?
What if the problem is the cable, motherboard, or somewhere else. That's why the hdd lights are normally controlled at the BIOS level.
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@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@dafyre said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@scottalanmiller said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
Actually they can't, because they don't know the use case. It's not about controlling all the hardware, it's about controlling everything from the disk to the application.
What do you mean that they don't know the use case...?
Does it matter? We just want a way to flash the "help me" light on a dying/dead disk, lol.
Would that not be something controllable by the firmware of the HD?
What if the problem is the cable, motherboard, or somewhere else. That's why the hdd lights are normally controlled at the BIOS level.
If that's the case, then why does the bios itself not flash the dead drive lights when using mdraid?
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@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@dafyre said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@scottalanmiller said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
Actually they can't, because they don't know the use case. It's not about controlling all the hardware, it's about controlling everything from the disk to the application.
What do you mean that they don't know the use case...?
Does it matter? We just want a way to flash the "help me" light on a dying/dead disk, lol.
Would that not be something controllable by the firmware of the HD?
What if the problem is the cable, motherboard, or somewhere else. That's why the hdd lights are normally controlled at the BIOS level.
What? How would a RAID card know if it's a cable or the backplane causing the issue?
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@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@dafyre said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@scottalanmiller said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
Actually they can't, because they don't know the use case. It's not about controlling all the hardware, it's about controlling everything from the disk to the application.
What do you mean that they don't know the use case...?
Does it matter? We just want a way to flash the "help me" light on a dying/dead disk, lol.
Would that not be something controllable by the firmware of the HD?
What if the problem is the cable, motherboard, or somewhere else. That's why the hdd lights are normally controlled at the BIOS level.
What? How would a RAID card know if it's a cable or the backplane causing the issue?
With a RAID card, it flashes the light, because it knows where the problem lies. It's when you don't have hardware RAID that you have the problem.
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@dafyre said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@scottalanmiller said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
Actually they can't, because they don't know the use case. It's not about controlling all the hardware, it's about controlling everything from the disk to the application.
What do you mean that they don't know the use case...?
Does it matter? We just want a way to flash the "help me" light on a dying/dead disk, lol.
Would that not be something controllable by the firmware of the HD?
That's not what blind swap does.
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@scottalanmiller said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@dafyre said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@scottalanmiller said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
Actually they can't, because they don't know the use case. It's not about controlling all the hardware, it's about controlling everything from the disk to the application.
What do you mean that they don't know the use case...?
Does it matter? We just want a way to flash the "help me" light on a dying/dead disk, lol.
Would that not be something controllable by the firmware of the HD?
That's not what blind swap does.
No, it doesn't. But if you know which drive is failing, that makes it easier to swap the correct drive.
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@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@dafyre said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@scottalanmiller said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
Actually they can't, because they don't know the use case. It's not about controlling all the hardware, it's about controlling everything from the disk to the application.
What do you mean that they don't know the use case...?
Does it matter? We just want a way to flash the "help me" light on a dying/dead disk, lol.
Would that not be something controllable by the firmware of the HD?
What if the problem is the cable, motherboard, or somewhere else. That's why the hdd lights are normally controlled at the BIOS level.
What? How would a RAID card know if it's a cable or the backplane causing the issue?
With a RAID card, it flashes the light, because it knows where the problem lies. It's when you don't have hardware RAID that you have the problem.
There again, if the lights are controlled at the BIOS level, why does having a hardware raid card matter?
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If the md authors would make some sort of blinky light function that would be sweet and solve this issue. mdadm -blink /dev/sde
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@momurda said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
If the md authors would make some sort of blinky light function that would be sweet and solve this issue. mdadm -blink /dev/sde
How do you do that for cases that only have a single HDD light?
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@dafyre said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@dafyre said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@scottalanmiller said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@travisdh1 said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@FATeknollogee said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
@Dashrender said in The Software RAID Inflection Point:
Because the software RAID would rarely, if ever, be aware of the type of hardware it's it, i.e. a HP server, a Dell server, etc - it probably has no way of mapping a drive to a specific port on the chassis and lighting the lights, etc - the things needed to make Blind Swap work.
In today's world with all the smart people we have, no one can write software that can map drives to a chassis?
If a hardware vendor wanted to, they easily could, but it would mean seriously hampering the number of options available on a general purpose server platform. NAS vendors do this all the time.
NAS vendors do it because they control all the hardware. Sure, Dell could do it for their system, and HP for theirs, etc - but why? They'd rather sell you a RAID card.
Actually they can't, because they don't know the use case. It's not about controlling all the hardware, it's about controlling everything from the disk to the application.
What do you mean that they don't know the use case...?
Does it matter? We just want a way to flash the "help me" light on a dying/dead disk, lol.
Would that not be something controllable by the firmware of the HD?
What if the problem is the cable, motherboard, or somewhere else. That's why the hdd lights are normally controlled at the BIOS level.
What? How would a RAID card know if it's a cable or the backplane causing the issue?
With a RAID card, it flashes the light, because it knows where the problem lies. It's when you don't have hardware RAID that you have the problem.
There again, if the lights are controlled at the BIOS level, why does having a hardware raid card matter?
Because you still want blind swap.