On Sat, Mar 1, 2008 at 12:06 PM, Craig James <craig_james@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > We're upgrading to a medium-sized server, a Dell PowerEdge 2950, dual-quad CPU's and 8 GB memory. This box can hold at most 8 disks (10K SCSI 2.5" 146 GB drives) and has Dell's Perc 6/i RAID controller. > > I'm thinking of this: > > 6 disks RAID 1+0 Postgres data > 1 disk WAL > 1 disk Linux > > I've often seen RAID 1 recommended for the WAL. Is that strictly for reliability, or is there a performance advantage to RAID 1 for the WAL? > > It seems to me separating the OS and WAL on two disks is better than making a single RAID 1 and sharing it, from a performance point of view. It's a trade off. Remember that if the single disk hold xlog fails you've just quite possubly lost your database. I'd be inclined to either using a RAID-1 of two disks for the OS and xlog, and having pgsql log to the 6 disk RAID-10 instead of the OS / xlog disk set. More important, do you have battery backed cache on the controller? A good controller with a battery backed cache can usually outrun a larger array with no write cache when it comes to transactions / writing to the disks. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: You can help support the PostgreSQL project by donating at http://www.postgresql.org/about/donate