Re: I need a PCI V2.1 4 port SATA card

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Brad Campbell wrote:
> I'd love to do something similar with PCI-E or PCI-X and make it go
> faster (the PCI bus bandwidth is the killer), however I've not seen
> many affordable PCI-E multi-port cards that are supported yet and
> PCI-X seems to mean moving to "server" class mainboards and the other
> expenses that come along with that.

Recently I was looking for a budget solution to exactly this problem, and the best I found was to use 2-port SiI 3132 based PCI-E 1x card combined with 1:5 SATA Splitter based on SiI 3726 (e.g. http://fwdepot.com/thestore/product_info.php/products_id/1245). Unfortunately I didn't find anyone selling the splitter here in Czechia, so I went with 4-port SiI PCI card, which is performing well and stable, but of course quite slow.

Some test I googled up at that time suggested that this combo can get about 220MB/s bandwidth through in real life (test was on Win32 though), so at today's drive speeds you can connect ~4-5 drives to one PCI-E without bus bandwidth becoming the limiting factor.

Anyway, for really budget machines I can recommend the PCI SiI 3124 based cards, the driver in kernel is working rock-stable for me. Only grudge is that driver doesn't sense if you disconnect a drive from SATA connector, i.e. when you do that, computer will freeze trying to write to disconnected drive. After ~3 minutes it times out and md kicks the drive out of the array, though.

If someone has any experience to share about SiI 3132+3726 under linux, I'll be happy to hear about it. According to http://linux-ata.org/software-status.html#pmp it should work, question is how stable it is, since it is recent development.

Petr

-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-raid" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

[Index of Archives]     [Linux RAID Wiki]     [ATA RAID]     [Linux SCSI Target Infrastructure]     [Linux Block]     [Linux IDE]     [Linux SCSI]     [Linux Hams]     [Device Mapper]     [Device Mapper Cryptographics]     [Kernel]     [Linux Admin]     [Linux Net]     [GFS]     [RPM]     [git]     [Yosemite Forum]


  Powered by Linux