John Robinson put forth on 12/30/2010 5:58 AM: > On 30/12/2010 10:39, Stan Hoeppner wrote: > [...] >> Any RAID scheme that uses parity is less than optimal, and up to >> horrible, for heavy random IO loads. As always, this depends on "how >> heavy" the load is. For up to a few hundred constant IOPS you can get >> away with parity RAID schemes. If you need a few thousand or many >> thousand IOPS, better stay away from parity RAID. > > Sorry, I have to disagree with this, in this situation. RAID-6 over 4 > discs will be just as fast for reading multiple small files as RAID-10 > over 4 discs, and a web server is a read-mostly environment, while at > the same time I can't imagine any RAID schema ever giving thousands of > IOPS over 4 discs, parity or no. That's because you apparently didn't learn about paragraph's in English class: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paragraph Do you Brits use paragraphs differently than we do here in the states? My first paragraph dealt with general performance of parity vs non parity RAID WRT high IO loads. My second paragraph covered the downside of the redundancy methods of RAID 3/4. My third paragraph dealt specifically with Roger's web server. Note that nothing in my first paragraph mentioned a web server workload. Also note that nowhere did I mention a count of 4 drive, nor commented regarding the suitability of any RAID level with 4 drives. Also note there were two "situations" mentioned by Roger. The first referenced a previous thread which dealt with a high transaction load server similar to a mail server, IIRC. My first paragraph related to that. The second "situation", to which you refer, dealt with Roger's web server. -- Stan -- 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