All, I think the below is accurate, but please cmiiw or misunderstand. === If your using normal big drives (1TB, etc.) in a raid-5 array, the general consensus of this list is that it is a bad idea. The reason being that the sector error rate for a bad sector has not changed with increasing density. So in the days of 1GB drives, the likelihood of a undetected / repaired bad sector was actually pretty low for the drive as whole. But for today's 1TB drives, the odds are 1000x worse. ie. 1000x more sectors with the same basic failure rate per sector. So a raid-5 composed of 1TB drives is 1000x more likely to be unable to rebuild itself after a drive failure than a raid-5 built from 1 GB drives of yesteryear. Thus the current recommendation is to use raid 6 with high density drives. The good news is that Western Digital is apparently introducing a new series of drives with an error rate "2 orders of magnitude" better than the current generation. See <http://www.anandtech.com/storage/showdoc.aspx?i=3691&p=1> The whole article is good, but this paragraph is what really got my attention: "From a numbers perspective, Western Digital estimates that the use of 4K sectors will give them an immediate 7%-11% increase in format efficiency. ECC burst error correction stands to improve by 50%, and the overall error rate capability improves by 2 orders of magnitude. In theory these reliability benefits should immediately apply to all 4K sector drives (making the Advanced Format drives more reliable than regular drives), but Western Digital is not pushing that idea at this time." So maybe raid-5 will once again be a reasonable choice again in the future. (I think these drives may already be available at least as engineering samples. Basic linux kernel support went in summer 2009 I believe. I believe 2.6.33 will be the first kernel to have been tested with these new class of drives.) I don't know if there is a mdraid wiki, but if so and someone wants to post the above there, please do. Greg -- Greg Freemyer -- 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