Configure Software RAID 1 in Centos
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@Dashrender said:
So the next question - Why are you using MX RAID instead of hardware RAID?
If I have to guess, it's because this is a test box, probably an old PC that doesn't have real RAID in it, so you can't test real RAID.
Testing MX RAID does not validate hardware RAID, so this test is also moot, assuming the production box will have hardware RAID.
Hardware RAID vs Soft raid isn't as big a deal as it used to be. The only big issues is no hardware cache and your cpu will take a slight performance hit, and possibly slightly longer re-build times. Neither of which are a big deal.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
With hardware RAID, you shut down the system and boot the system from either drive. In a software solution like the one in question, that does not appear to be the case. This is what I was getting at. I wasn't talking at all about how useful this test would or wouldn't be.
In hardware RAID you would break the array and cause the same problems. Sure it would boot, but it would not test what you thought you were testing and it would leave you with a broken array. There is no value to the test but a lot of risk.
What is it you think @Lakshmana is testing? Let's assume I asked this same question. The only thing I would be testing is - A: can either disk boot back up to the previous state? Do both drives have the same data as of the time I took them offline? I'm not sure what else i would be testing? If I saw that a drive didn't have any data on it, but the other did, I would know there was something wrong withe the RAID system.
Now that said, I've personally NEVER tested a RAID system, hardware or software to this degree. I just trust that it's working out of the box, and so far I've never been let down - one drive fails, I replace it, some time later another drive fails, I replace it, etc.. and my server experiences no downtime.
But just because I trust the system doesn't mean everyone does. So doing this test on a system before it goes live in production (but never while in production) isn't unreasonable if the manager wants it.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
Hardware RAID vs Soft raid isn't as big a deal as it used to be. The only big issues is no hardware cache and your cpu will take a slight performance hit, and possibly slightly longer re-build times. Neither of which are a big deal.
Actually rebuild times have been, on average, faster with software RAID since around 2001. The Pentium III was the first CPU where software RAID typically rebuilt faster with software than hardware because the main CPU was just so much faster than the offload RAID processing unit.
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@Dashrender said:
What is it you think @Lakshmana is testing?
What they are trying to do is "look at the files" to see if they replicated. But this only tells them that they DID replicate on an old array that they've now blown away in order to test this.
What you CAN do, and this is not advised, is power down the system, remove the disk, attach it to a secondary system, observe it read only, replace it and power back on.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
So the next question - Why are you using MX RAID instead of hardware RAID?
If I have to guess, it's because this is a test box, probably an old PC that doesn't have real RAID in it, so you can't test real RAID.
Testing MX RAID does not validate hardware RAID, so this test is also moot, assuming the production box will have hardware RAID.
MD RAID is completely real and very enterprise. This isn't Windows, no reason to avoid MD RAID in production.
Well in RAID 1/10 I suppose the added load today probably isn't an issue for the processor compared to say a RAID 6. But have processors become so powerful that on SMB systems we no longer need to worry about performance drain from doing RAID 6?
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@Dashrender said:
But just because I trust the system doesn't mean everyone does. So doing this test on a system before it goes live in production (but never while in production) isn't unreasonable if the manager wants it.
No, it is very unreasonable. Just because people lack trust doesn't mean that it is reasonable to not trust things. Literally millions of these are in use and have been for decades and work every day. Not trusting this is completely unreasonable and irrational. There are so many places to place your worries that are realistic. Spinning wheels trying to validate an irrational lack of faith in something so insanely well proven is completely unreasonable.
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
So the next question - Why are you using MX RAID instead of hardware RAID?
If I have to guess, it's because this is a test box, probably an old PC that doesn't have real RAID in it, so you can't test real RAID.
Testing MX RAID does not validate hardware RAID, so this test is also moot, assuming the production box will have hardware RAID.
MD RAID is completely real and very enterprise. This isn't Windows, no reason to avoid MD RAID in production.
Well in RAID 1/10 I suppose the added load today probably isn't an issue for the processor compared to say a RAID 6. But have processors become so powerful that on SMB systems we no longer need to worry about performance drain from doing RAID 6?
Your load is likely less in SMB. I think a lot of the fuss has been some admins don't understand the tools of software raid and how to use it as it can be seen as more complex than just going into your HW raid boot rom and setting up a LUN.
Many SANs are using only software RAID
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@Dashrender said:
Well in RAID 1/10 I suppose the added load today probably isn't an issue for the processor compared to say a RAID 6. But have processors become so powerful that on SMB systems we no longer need to worry about performance drain from doing RAID 6?
That was in 2001!! RAID 7, which uses way more processor power than anything else, is software only! There is no need for SMB to be a factor, RAID has the same load and impact no matter what the environment size. It is the array size that makes the difference and these vary little between company sizes. You've not needed to worry about the "drain" of any RAID level for nearly a decade and a half. And fifteen years ago it was only small Windows-based systems on Intel Pentium II and lower than were an issue. Enterprise servers have always been pure software RAID, even twenty years ago.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Well in RAID 1/10 I suppose the added load today probably isn't an issue for the processor compared to say a RAID 6. But have processors become so powerful that on SMB systems we no longer need to worry about performance drain from doing RAID 6?
That was in 2001!! RAID 7, which uses way more processor power than anything else, is software only! There is no need for SMB to be a factor, RAID has the same load and impact no matter what the environment size. It is the array size that makes the difference and these vary little between company sizes. You've not needed to worry about the "drain" of any RAID level for nearly a decade and a half. And fifteen years ago it was only small Windows-based systems on Intel Pentium II and lower than were an issue. Enterprise servers have always been pure software RAID, even twenty years ago.
I've never worked on an Enterprise system before - not in my wheelhouse, so I've never seen non hardware RAID systems. I knew it was much less of an issue, but didn't consider it a complete non issue.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
But just because I trust the system doesn't mean everyone does. So doing this test on a system before it goes live in production (but never while in production) isn't unreasonable if the manager wants it.
No, it is very unreasonable. Just because people lack trust doesn't mean that it is reasonable to not trust things. Literally millions of these are in use and have been for decades and work every day. Not trusting this is completely unreasonable and irrational. There are so many places to place your worries that are realistic. Spinning wheels trying to validate an irrational lack of faith in something so insanely well proven is completely unreasonable.
What does testing this once or twice before a company goes live hurt other than setup time/tech time? I'm guessing that after seeing several of these solutions go into place the manager would probably just move on and not require it in the future - but I could be wrong.
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
But just because I trust the system doesn't mean everyone does. So doing this test on a system before it goes live in production (but never while in production) isn't unreasonable if the manager wants it.
No, it is very unreasonable. Just because people lack trust doesn't mean that it is reasonable to not trust things. Literally millions of these are in use and have been for decades and work every day. Not trusting this is completely unreasonable and irrational. There are so many places to place your worries that are realistic. Spinning wheels trying to validate an irrational lack of faith in something so insanely well proven is completely unreasonable.
What does testing this once or twice before a company goes live hurt other than setup time/tech time? I'm guessing that after seeing several of these solutions go into place the manager would probably just move on and not require it in the future - but I could be wrong.
Are you going to test it once again after you rebuild the array you now broke? if not what's the guarantee it's still working? It's a endless cycle since you have to break it to check it and you are stating the process over.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
But just because I trust the system doesn't mean everyone does. So doing this test on a system before it goes live in production (but never while in production) isn't unreasonable if the manager wants it.
No, it is very unreasonable. Just because people lack trust doesn't mean that it is reasonable to not trust things. Literally millions of these are in use and have been for decades and work every day. Not trusting this is completely unreasonable and irrational. There are so many places to place your worries that are realistic. Spinning wheels trying to validate an irrational lack of faith in something so insanely well proven is completely unreasonable.
What does testing this once or twice before a company goes live hurt other than setup time/tech time? I'm guessing that after seeing several of these solutions go into place the manager would probably just move on and not require it in the future - but I could be wrong.
Are you going to test it once again after you rebuild the array you now broke? if not what's the guarantee it's still working? It's a endless cycle since you have to break it to check it and you are stating the process over.
Of course not, and while I see your point, it's a cyclical thing - but for someone who is unfamiliar with the system, if they want to prove it to themselves once before production, I don't see the harm. But if I was their IT team, after showing this manager 2 or 3 times (different servers) I would have another conversation with them about dropping this need, since he's been shown the technology works and needs to be trusted on it's own merit.
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
But just because I trust the system doesn't mean everyone does. So doing this test on a system before it goes live in production (but never while in production) isn't unreasonable if the manager wants it.
No, it is very unreasonable. Just because people lack trust doesn't mean that it is reasonable to not trust things. Literally millions of these are in use and have been for decades and work every day. Not trusting this is completely unreasonable and irrational. There are so many places to place your worries that are realistic. Spinning wheels trying to validate an irrational lack of faith in something so insanely well proven is completely unreasonable.
What does testing this once or twice before a company goes live hurt other than setup time/tech time? I'm guessing that after seeing several of these solutions go into place the manager would probably just move on and not require it in the future - but I could be wrong.
As long as you are doing it ONLY before... you are only wasting time, not really hurting anything. But it is a process that cannot continue to a live system.
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@Dashrender said:
I've never worked on an Enterprise system before - not in my wheelhouse, so I've never seen non hardware RAID systems. I knew it was much less of an issue, but didn't consider it a complete non issue.
Pretty much the entire NAS and SAN space is software RAID. You see it all the time and don't realize it, I'm sure.
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@Dashrender said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
But just because I trust the system doesn't mean everyone does. So doing this test on a system before it goes live in production (but never while in production) isn't unreasonable if the manager wants it.
No, it is very unreasonable. Just because people lack trust doesn't mean that it is reasonable to not trust things. Literally millions of these are in use and have been for decades and work every day. Not trusting this is completely unreasonable and irrational. There are so many places to place your worries that are realistic. Spinning wheels trying to validate an irrational lack of faith in something so insanely well proven is completely unreasonable.
What does testing this once or twice before a company goes live hurt other than setup time/tech time? I'm guessing that after seeing several of these solutions go into place the manager would probably just move on and not require it in the future - but I could be wrong.
Are you going to test it once again after you rebuild the array you now broke? if not what's the guarantee it's still working? It's a endless cycle since you have to break it to check it and you are stating the process over.
Of course not, and while I see your point, it's a cyclical thing - but for someone who is unfamiliar with the system, if they want to prove it to themselves once before production, I don't see the harm. But if I was their IT team, after showing this manager 2 or 3 times (different servers) I would have another conversation with them about dropping this need, since he's been shown the technology works and needs to be trusted on it's own merit.
If a manager has never seen RAID you have much, much bigger issues.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
But just because I trust the system doesn't mean everyone does. So doing this test on a system before it goes live in production (but never while in production) isn't unreasonable if the manager wants it.
No, it is very unreasonable. Just because people lack trust doesn't mean that it is reasonable to not trust things. Literally millions of these are in use and have been for decades and work every day. Not trusting this is completely unreasonable and irrational. There are so many places to place your worries that are realistic. Spinning wheels trying to validate an irrational lack of faith in something so insanely well proven is completely unreasonable.
What does testing this once or twice before a company goes live hurt other than setup time/tech time? I'm guessing that after seeing several of these solutions go into place the manager would probably just move on and not require it in the future - but I could be wrong.
As long as you are doing it ONLY before... you are only wasting time, not really hurting anything. But it is a process that cannot continue to a live system.
I completely agree- doing it once the system is in production is reckless and dangerous!
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
I've never worked on an Enterprise system before - not in my wheelhouse, so I've never seen non hardware RAID systems. I knew it was much less of an issue, but didn't consider it a complete non issue.
Pretty much the entire NAS and SAN space is software RAID. You see it all the time and don't realize it, I'm sure.
We don't have any of these either - so you're right I haven't been exposed.
Do the small Buffalo and others do RAID all in software? it's not in the hardware within the drive enclosure?
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@Dashrender said:
Do the small Buffalo and others do RAID all in software? it's not in the hardware within the drive enclosure?
Correct. All of them. Buffalo, QNAP, Synology, ReadyNAS, ReadyDATA, Drobo, Thecus, Seagate, Western Digital, etc. Everything in that category is software RAID. Some of them, like ReadyDATA, specifically are sold based on the software RAID itself (the selling points of the ReadyDATA over the ReadyNAS is in the software RAID!)
In the bigger space you get a mix of software and hardware. So NetApp, I believe, uses an ASIC. But they also do a RAID level not available in standard software RAID from any RAID vendor, so they had to do something special anyway.
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Interesting, thanks.