On Fri, 2006-02-24 at 17:12, Craig A. James wrote: > Joshua D. Drake wrote: > >> I find this strains credibility, that this major manufacturer of PC's > >> would do something deceptive that hurts performance, when it would be > >> easily detected and widely reported. Can anyone cite a specific > >> instances where this has happened? Such as, "I bought Dell model XYZ, > >> which was advertised to have these parts and these specs, but in fact > >> had these other parts and here are the actual specs." > > > > I can :) > > > > Feb 20 07:33:52 master kernel: [4294682.803000] Vendor: MegaRAID > > Model: LD 0 RAID1 51G Rev: 196T > > --- snip --- > > This machine... if you run it in raid 5 will only get 7-9 megabytes a > > second READ! performance. That is with 6 SCSI drives. > > If you run it in RAID 10 you get a more reasonable 50-55 megabytes per > > second. > > But you don't say how this machine was advertised. Are there components in that list that were not as advertised? Was the machine advertised as capable of RAID 5? Were performance figures published for RAID 5? > > If Dell advertised that the machine could do what you asked, then you're right -- they screwed you. But if it was designed for and advertised to a different market, then I've made my point: People are blaming Dell for something that's not their fault. IT was advertised as a rackmount server with dual processors and a RAID controller with 6 drive bays. I would expect such a machine to perform well in both RAID 5 and RAID 1+0 configurations. It certainly didn't do what we expected of a machine with the specs it had. For the same price, form factor and basic setup, i.e. dual P-IV 2 to 4 gig ram, 5 or 6 drive bays, I'd expect the same thing. They were crap. Honestly. Did you see the post where I mentioned that under heavy I/O load they lock up about once every month or so. They all do, every one I've ever seen. Some take more time than others, but they all eventually lock up while running. I was pretty much agnostic as to which servers we bought at my last job, until someone started ordering from Dell and we got 2600 series machines. No one should have to live with these things.