> But ... > I've been reading about some of the issues with ZFS performance and have > discovered that it needs a *lot* of RAM to support decent caching ... > the recommendation is for a GByte of RAM per TByte of storage just for > the metadata, which can add up. Maybe cache memory starvation is one > reason why so many disappointing test results are showing up. Yes, it uses most of any available RAM as cache. Newer implementations can use SSDs as a kind of 2nd-level cache ("L2-ARC"). Also, certain on-disk logs can be written out to NVRAMs directly, speeding up things even more. Compared with Cache-RAM in RAID-Controllers, RAM for servers is dirt-cheap. The philosophy is: why put tiny, expensive amounts of RAM into the RAID-controller and have it try to make guesses on what should be cached and what not - if we can add RAM to the server directly at a fraction of the cost and let the OS handle _everything_ short of moving the disk-heads over the platters. IMO, it's a brilliant concept. Do you know if there is a lot of performance-penalty with KVM/VBox, compared to Solaris Zones? _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos