On Sat, Mar 6, 2010 at 3:17 PM, Guy Watkins <linux-raid@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: <SNIP> > } > } At a minimum I would build a 3-disk raid 6. raid 6 does a lot of i/o > } which may be a problem. > > If he only needs 3 drives I would recommend RAID1. Can still loose 2 drives > and you don't have the RAID6 I/O overhead. > > Also, you said your data is important. If so, you need a backup solution! > 2 copies with 1 off-site. Maybe alternate between the 2 each day or week. > > How much data per day? How much data during the next 3 years? > > Guy OK - good points. The 'data' is very important to me. Full disclosure (and it well could make a difference I suppose) but the stock data is really just part of a medium sized VMWare image on the order of 10GB. VMWare is running on Gentoo and hosting Windows XP currently, Windows 7 later possibly. Windows is the only platform that has programs that currently do what I need. (And my trading partner is completely Windows based so until I convert him to Linux Windows must be part of the recipe.) Anyway, I try to keep my VMWare images below 10GB so that I can tar them up once a week and write them to a dual-layer DVD for backup. Once a month I move one to the safe deposit box at the bank. Otherwise I keep three in the house at the far end in a fireproof box. (Although high temp might damage them if the whole house goes up. Who knows...) So, Gentoo hosts VMWare. VMWare maps a logical 10GB Windows C: drive into a bunch of 2GB files and the stock data it typically a single file for each stock where the file size approaches 100MB. I have little or no control in terms of how that 100MB file is placed on the drive. I haven't a clue what that really means in terms of disk access from a Linux point of view. Daily backups are just my programming. They are incremental and just sent to another computer on the network, and then also covered in the VMWare backup at the end of the week. Replying to Asdo - I'm hoping to use a more or less standard desktop or server motherboard with 6-8 SATA ports dedicating 3-6 ports to this RAID interface and then using Linux software RAID and no hardware RAID controllers. Is this unreasonable in your opinion for the work flow I'm describing using VMWare? I'm concerned about any RAID hardware that leaves me stranded if the controller dies. Thanks all! - Mark -- 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