EasyGoing1
Dabbler
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2021
- Messages
- 42
Heck even something like this would be FINE as a boot drive: https://www.amazon.com/Samsung-MUF-256AB-AM-Plus-256GB/dp/B07D7Q41PM
That tells me you're not happy with the performance ... which CPU do you have in yours?I'm running a couple on mine without a problem--but again, only four cores, with no hyperthreading. I'm considering a CPU swap for mine at some point.
I'm satisfied with the performance, but I'm also limiting what I do with it. And I'm not too concerned for now; I have three other nodes, each with dual E5-2680v2, for when I need the grunt. But the system will take more CPU than the stock E-2224, so if I can find an upgraded CPU, I'll consider swapping it in.That tells me you're not happy with the performance ... which CPU do you have in yours?
... first one is ... no hardware raid? [...] But I'm wondering if hardware RAID is even something that home NAS boxes typically even do? Is it pretty much software raid these days?
RAID itself is a thing that is on an outbound trajectory in the industry.
Even Dell's high end H740p RAID controller that lists for north of $1K
SO I honestly had never heard of RAID Z before ... I've been focusing most of my time over the last 8-ish years in software development, mainly Java but also some C++ and microcontrollers. But half way through your post I googled it and read a summary of it including a brief history and once again ... I'm impressed with how innovative people are in this industry. We've all heard the promises of so-called "self-healing" drive formats, and we've all been disappointed. My current 8TB external is an APFS volume but one day I noticed that some of my data was just ... GONE! No errors ... no nothing ... fortunately, I was able to get the data back using the free version of DiskDrill, but nothing I've tried has been able to fix the APFS errors that show up on a health scan.RAID itself is a thing that is on an outbound trajectory in the industry.
...
ZFS wasn't designed for home NAS boxes. When it was designed in the mid 2000's, it was aimed at high end Sun servers. We're now enough years on that the hardware to run it plausibly is within reach of home users, but don't equate ZFS's "software RAID" with "home NAS boxes" -- most home NAS boxes still do not run anything like ZFS. But you can have it, it's within practical reach.
"Equipped with TWO - DUAL CORE HIGH PERFORMANCE AMD Opteron processors" - LOL with all the drives that thing could hold, I'm amazed it worked at all ... but hey at least it was 32 bit compatible ... so ...![]()
Sun Fire X4500 System Walkthrough - Part 1
Get an in depth look at the Sun Fire X4500 server and see how this innovative system can help ease the complexities of data center applications.www.youtube.com
We use to laugh at the idea that people would allow their sensitive data to be stored "in a cloud" ... businesses not maintaining absolute control over their data by keeping it in house? ABSURD! Look at the trends now ... I once said I would NEVER have a laptop as my main computer ... now I know I will NEVER own a desktop again. But it is hard to see RAID controllers going the way of the DODO ... If anything, they serve a function that will ALWAYS be needed when you need to build a server that process near light speeds ... having a piece of hardware in it that off-loads that function ... is something that will always be appealing to an engineer. GPUs are a great example of doing just that... look at how that trend has gone since cyber currency hit the planet...News to me... RAID is still very much a thing, just not in ZFS circles. Those cloud block & object stores are build from the same parts as everything else. It's all just hidden from view.
I would argue that you could squeeze more performance out a server that is implementing software in the operating system to handle ... well ... just about any function really. We've moved the process of encryption over to dedicated silicon which was a great thing to do ... I think an operating system should really be more of a resource steward in as much as possible ... because once you start taxing a CPU with overhead, the entire system starts feeling sluggish so the more you can keep that from happening ... the better ... and of course keeping Windows 100 feet away from the building at all times (even if it takes a restraining order) is just good common sense. Though I have to say I am impressed with Windows 11 ... but Windows 11 is what Windows 200 should have been ... they aren't just a day late and a dollar short, they still have a LONG way to go ... but at least they are working in that direction which gives me hope that someday they will finally "get it".We have abandoned RAID controllers more than 15 years ago, even before we switched to ZFS. A software based solution is in all aspects superior, most importantly resilience to hardware failure. All "hardware RAIDs" rely on a specific brand, sometimes even model of controller. What if the one in a five year old machine breaks and you cannot get the correct replacement? We used GEOM mirror throughout. Server fails, pull disks, put into *any* server with the matching (SATA/SAS/SCSI) ports, boot, be back in business.
We use to laugh at the idea that people would allow their sensitive data to be stored "in a cloud" ... businesses not maintaining absolute control over their data by keeping it in house? ABSURD! Look at the trends now ... I once said I would NEVER have a laptop as my main computer ... now I know I will NEVER own a desktop again.
That's interesting ... I always saw the practice of outsourcing daily needed skills to an outside organization as being something that is akin to mixing water and oil and is usually only done because the company lacks the internal skills to do it themselves. Certainly, it is usually less expensive to do something in-house when it's a function that must be done daily. Of course, it makes more sense for a company to outsource a function that only needs to be done once in a while but outsourcing skills that must be utilized daily usually means that they pay double or more for those same skills than if they kept them in-house... I never understood that practice, especially for the private sector. Government outsourcing I don't have much problem with since it's basically a practice of re-investing tax money into the economy although it's still technically a waste of money - and I'm not referring to government projects like new building construction or when the military wants to find out if there is a better way to design camouflage clothing ...But in this case, the problem hasn't shifted like the laptop/desktop split, and it certainly hasn't gone away. When you move to cloud, you're just paying to make it someone else's problem, so you don't have to manage it. They're still building their equipment from the same pieces of technology. They just get to economize on scale, split their risk among fault domains, standardizing on middle cut "binned" CPU's that don't even get price listed for purchase by you and me, etc... A modern server with 2Tb of RAM, and a couple racks of JBOD's attached to multiple HW RAID controllers is a FRU to these outfits. But at the end of it, your "object storage" sits on some kind of disk in some kind of arrangement of redundant array. You expect 100% redundancy with 4-nines uptime, and they bill accordingly.
For the really critical corporate stuff... You can even buy their entire management schema & codebase, rent their staff, and hire them to run their cloud in your datacenter. I know at least one of the major players will sell this. You get all the same API's, all the same features, and even get to define change rules and other critical requirements tailored to business needs. All the company provides is floor space, power & air-conditioning. But only government's & huge companies like telco's can afford it so far...
News to me... RAID is still very much a thing, just not in ZFS circles. Those cloud block & object stores are build from the same parts as everything else. It's all just hidden from view.
FWIW - Depending on your NVMe requirements... The H755N is the current "high end" shipping controller...![]()
"Equipped with TWO - DUAL CORE HIGH PERFORMANCE AMD Opteron processors" - LOL with all the drives that thing could hold, I'm amazed it worked at all ... but hey at least it was 32 bit compatible ... so ...
Heck even something like this would be FINE as a boot drive: https://www.amazon.com/Samsung-MUF-256AB-AM-Plus-256GB/dp/B07D7Q41PM
My source of amazement was that you posted a link to a server ad from about 15 years ago...AMD Opteron kicked the crap out of contemporary Intel offerings. Not clear what your source of amazement is, here. Intel regained the lead with Sandy/Ivy Bridge, and held on for a good while, but it's flipped again with EPYC/Ryzen.
"RAID has been on its way out for a long time" - I don't know about you, but when I have a house guest and they are "on their way out" ... they don't linger around for another decade ... I guess Raid controllers are the last remaining "rude" house guests that just won't take a hint? And VMware officially recommending JBODs for virtual machines is only evidence that what I said is correct ... which is that there will always be a use case for software raid and there will always be a use case for hardware raid ... and that leaves hardware raid anywhere BUT "on it's way out" ... I seem to recall similar predictions in the late '90s concerning Serial ports when USB was busting onto the scene ... yet over 20 years later ... I think Cisco still uses Serial as the primary means of accessing their headless hardware...RAID has been on its way out for a long time, and it has nothing to do with "ZFS circles."
If you want the obvious example, it would be VMware vSAN, where they discourage the use of RAID controllers, using individual JBOD disks and turning off write caching if you have a certified RAID controller (which is basically killing most of the RAID card's functionality).
Most of the storage vendors these days seem to be using proprietary software stacks for their storage, and not using hardware RAID controllers in there. This allows for a lot of flexibility in the way these are designed and implemented, including allowing for different kinds of data protection that aren't conventional RAID5/6. Don't think you'll find a RAID controller in your typical Nutanix, Pure Storage, etc. devices. (with some luck I'll even have remembered correctly).
Now of course if you happen to work for a Windows shop, I'm sure you still see lots of hardware RAID, but the cloud vendors are definitely looking to cut costs where they can, and eliminating hardware RAID has been a large component of that. AWS EBS is definitely not on hardware RAID, and their availability policy should make that clear ... if you want RAID-like protection, you need to do it on your virtual machine at the OS level.
Over here at SOL, this has been a thing basically forever, preferring multiple inexpensive servers ("RAIS" - redundant array of inexpensive servers) over a single, pricey, and only somewhat more reliable server. Sometimes it felt like we were a bit of an outlier, but eventually the world caught up thanks in part to AWS and a generation of developers who learned new abstractions that allowed them to build stuff like microservices.
This doesn't mean that they don't make hardware RAID controllers anymore, or that Windows Server is dead. These things will be at least somewhat relevant for a long time, but their criticality to core infrastructure design is definitely in sharp decline.