Kevin Horton
Guru
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2015
- Messages
- 730
That rule might possibly make sense if the data is not compressed. But, modern CPUs have more than enough processing power to handle the small overhead from compressed data, and data compression is now the default. The sizing variability due to file compression throws out the assumptions that underpin that "rule", so it is no longer valid. Much more info here.Thx. and performance wise, is there a problem if i dont follow the 4,6,8 drive rule in the raidZ2 setup?
Bottom line - don't fret over hitting some magic number of disks for a given RAIDZ level. Just be aware that if the number of disks in a single vdev gets too high that performance suffers. Seven disks in RAIDZ2 is perfectly fine.