Bidule0hm
Server Electronics Sorcerer
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2013
- Messages
- 3,710
It seems to be totally unnecessary to waste an SATA channel just for booting where theoretically each NAS would experience only 1 boot in its lifetime.
This is why we often use USB sticks instead of SATA drives for the boot drive(s) ;)
Also, from the RAID Reliability Calculator, does "meantime to data loss" mean a complete (thus catastrophic) failure of the entire RAID with unrecoverable data?
Yes, "data loss" means "data loss" :D
By chance, I found the following report. Notice Hitachi fares much better than others. Amazingly the Hitachi 4TB have 5 platters.
https://www.backblaze.com/blog/best-hard-drive/
Backblaze stats are not valid for our case because of the drives environment they use (high vibrations, very low temps).
According to the RAID calculator on failure rate, the MTTDL is associated with data failure not drive failure. As I understand it, data failure can be corrected by ZFS.
http://www.servethehome.com/raid-calculator/raid-reliability-calculator-simple-mttdl-model/
Yes, their results are false for RAID-Zx because ZFS can correct the data corruption.
The idea is that when one fails, one must replace it immediately. The probability of another failure in the meantime becomes the issue. Given the analyses, I have to agree with all of you that RAID-Z2 is the de facto best way to go.
In fact if you want the best reliability RAID-Z3 is better ;)