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    SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?

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    • dave247D
      dave247 @JaredBusch
      last edited by

      @jaredbusch said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

      @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

      BTW: why are we calling hard drives "Winchester drives"?

      Someone should update this wiki article to be other countries, and @scottalanmiller
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_hard_disk_drives
      0_1537046374155_b4289a30-2850-4b2c-ab36-cb641ff766b0-image.png

      Yeah I've already looked up "Winchester drive". I still don't understand why you guys would refer to modern hard disk drives as Winchester drives. That would be like referring to all gasoline vehicles as Model-T's..

      JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • JaredBuschJ
        JaredBusch @dave247
        last edited by

        @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

        @jaredbusch said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

        @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

        BTW: why are we calling hard drives "Winchester drives"?

        Someone should update this wiki article to be other countries, and @scottalanmiller
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_hard_disk_drives
        0_1537046374155_b4289a30-2850-4b2c-ab36-cb641ff766b0-image.png

        Yeah I've already looked up "Winchester drive". I still don't understand why you guys would refer to modern hard disk drives as Winchester drives. That would be like referring to all gasoline vehicles as Model-T's..

        I don't. Scott does. Because Scott does, a number of other people do also. The term is a correct usage.

        dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • dave247D
          dave247 @JaredBusch
          last edited by

          @jaredbusch said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

          @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

          @jaredbusch said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

          @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

          BTW: why are we calling hard drives "Winchester drives"?

          Someone should update this wiki article to be other countries, and @scottalanmiller
          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_hard_disk_drives
          0_1537046374155_b4289a30-2850-4b2c-ab36-cb641ff766b0-image.png

          Yeah I've already looked up "Winchester drive". I still don't understand why you guys would refer to modern hard disk drives as Winchester drives. That would be like referring to all gasoline vehicles as Model-T's..

          I don't. Scott does. Because Scott does, a number of other people do also. The term is a correct usage.

          How is it correct usage?

          JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • JaredBuschJ
            JaredBusch @dave247
            last edited by

            @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

            @jaredbusch said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

            @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

            @jaredbusch said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

            @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

            BTW: why are we calling hard drives "Winchester drives"?

            Someone should update this wiki article to be other countries, and @scottalanmiller
            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_hard_disk_drives
            0_1537046374155_b4289a30-2850-4b2c-ab36-cb641ff766b0-image.png

            Yeah I've already looked up "Winchester drive". I still don't understand why you guys would refer to modern hard disk drives as Winchester drives. That would be like referring to all gasoline vehicles as Model-T's..

            I don't. Scott does. Because Scott does, a number of other people do also. The term is a correct usage.

            How is it correct usage?

            Just because a once common term has fallen out of common usage, that does not invalidate it as a correct term. This nickname was common, and is no longer so. Doesn't make it wrong. Well, any more wrong than it was to start.

            dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • dave247D
              dave247 @JaredBusch
              last edited by dave247

              @jaredbusch said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

              @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

              @jaredbusch said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

              @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

              @jaredbusch said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

              @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

              BTW: why are we calling hard drives "Winchester drives"?

              Someone should update this wiki article to be other countries, and @scottalanmiller
              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_hard_disk_drives
              0_1537046374155_b4289a30-2850-4b2c-ab36-cb641ff766b0-image.png

              Yeah I've already looked up "Winchester drive". I still don't understand why you guys would refer to modern hard disk drives as Winchester drives. That would be like referring to all gasoline vehicles as Model-T's..

              I don't. Scott does. Because Scott does, a number of other people do also. The term is a correct usage.

              How is it correct usage?

              Just because a once common term has fallen out of common usage, that does not invalidate it as a correct term. This nickname was common, and is no longer so. Doesn't make it wrong. Well, any more wrong than it was to start.

              So it's a nickname, not a technical term? If that's the case, then I'd say it's more confusing than anything since it's an antiquated nickname. Just call them hard disk drives or spindle drives or something. That seems a lot more clear and it still differentiates it from SSD drives.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • PhlipElderP
                PhlipElder @dave247
                last edited by PhlipElder

                @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                I'm planning the build on a new server. I originally intended on putting 8 x "900GB 15K RPM SAS 12Gbps 512e" drives into a RAID 10 config using an H740P adapter, but then I saw that there are quite a few options for SAS SSD. I haven't really learned too much about the differences of putting SSD in RAID and how it compares to HDD in RAID, so I wanted to see if anyone here (Scott) had any input on the matter.

                Example: Would it be worth putting, say, 6 x "1.6TB SSD SAS Mix Use 12Gbps 512e" drives into a RAID 10 instead? Is there a better approach with SSD in RAID?

                RAID 6 is the way to go. We lost a server after replacing a drive and it's RAID 10 pair decided to drop out about 5 to 10 minutes into a rebuild.

                In our comparison testing 8x 10K SAS drives in RAID 6 has a mean throughput of 800MiB/Second and about 250-450 IOPS per disk depending on the storage stack configuration.

                SAS SSD would be anywhere from 25K IOPS per disk to 55K-75K IOPS per disk depending on whether read intensive, mixed use, or write intensive. There are some good deals out there on HGST SSDs (our preferred SAS SSD vendor).

                dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • dave247D
                  dave247 @PhlipElder
                  last edited by

                  @phlipelder said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                  @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                  I'm planning the build on a new server. I originally intended on putting 8 x "900GB 15K RPM SAS 12Gbps 512e" drives into a RAID 10 config using an H740P adapter, but then I saw that there are quite a few options for SAS SSD. I haven't really learned too much about the differences of putting SSD in RAID and how it compares to HDD in RAID, so I wanted to see if anyone here (Scott) had any input on the matter.

                  Example: Would it be worth putting, say, 6 x "1.6TB SSD SAS Mix Use 12Gbps 512e" drives into a RAID 10 instead? Is there a better approach with SSD in RAID?

                  RAID 6 is the way to go. We lost a server after replacing a drive and it's RAID 10 pair decided to drop out about 5 to 10 minutes into a rebuild.

                  In our comparison testing 8x 10K SAS drives in RAID 6 has a mean throughput of 800MiB/Second and about 250-450 IOPS per disk depending on the storage stack configuration.

                  SAS SSD would be anywhere from 25K IOPS per disk to 55K-75K IOPS per disk depending on whether read intensive, mixed use, or write intensive. There are some good deals out there on HGST SSDs (our preferred SAS SSD vendor).

                  Yeah, I've decided on RAID 6 if I am able to go with SSD drives. I am building out the server on Dell and purchasing through our VAR when it comes time to order.

                  JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • DustinB3403D
                    DustinB3403 @dave247
                    last edited by DustinB3403

                    @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                    BTW: why are we calling hard drives "Winchester drives"?

                    Because the platters (bullet holder) have to spin while an arm (hammer) moves to find whatever is needed.

                    Winchester guns are grand symbols of manual action required. With a lot of moving parts.

                    Whereas any fully automatic weapon would be like an SSD. No moving parts to find whatever is needed. (Fire bullets)

                    dave247D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • dave247D
                      dave247 @DustinB3403
                      last edited by

                      @dustinb3403 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                      @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                      BTW: why are we calling hard drives "Winchester drives"?

                      Because the platters (bullet holder) have to spin while an arm (hammer) moves to find whatever is needed.

                      Winchester guns are grand symbols of manual action required. With a lot of moving parts.

                      Whereas any fully automatic weapon would be like an SSD. No moving parts to find whatever is needed. (Fire bullets)

                      Now this is a freaking answer!:smiling_face_with_open_mouth_smiling_eyes:

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller
                        last edited by

                        In 1973, IBM introduced the IBM 3340 "Winchester" disk drive and the 3348 data module, the first significant commercial use of low mass and low load heads with lubricated platters and the last IBM disk drive with removable media. This technology and its derivatives remained the standard through 2011. Project head Kenneth Haughton named it after the Winchester 30-30 rifle because it was planned to have two 30 MB spindles; however, the actual product shipped with two spindles for data modules of either 35 MB or 70 MB. - Wikipedia

                        ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • ObsolesceO
                          Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                          last edited by

                          @scottalanmiller Didn't know you used Wikipedia ^_^

                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @Obsolesce
                            last edited by

                            @obsolesce said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                            @scottalanmiller Didn't know you used Wikipedia ^_^

                            Mostly Wikipedia uses me 😉

                            ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • ObsolesceO
                              Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by

                              @scottalanmiller said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                              @obsolesce said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                              @scottalanmiller Didn't know you used Wikipedia ^_^

                              Mostly Wikipedia uses me 😉

                              0_1537194232220_28a50df2-a197-46c0-950f-c26a7dbf37ac-image.png

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • JaredBuschJ
                                JaredBusch @dave247
                                last edited by JaredBusch

                                @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                @phlipelder said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                I'm planning the build on a new server. I originally intended on putting 8 x "900GB 15K RPM SAS 12Gbps 512e" drives into a RAID 10 config using an H740P adapter, but then I saw that there are quite a few options for SAS SSD. I haven't really learned too much about the differences of putting SSD in RAID and how it compares to HDD in RAID, so I wanted to see if anyone here (Scott) had any input on the matter.

                                Example: Would it be worth putting, say, 6 x "1.6TB SSD SAS Mix Use 12Gbps 512e" drives into a RAID 10 instead? Is there a better approach with SSD in RAID?

                                RAID 6 is the way to go. We lost a server after replacing a drive and it's RAID 10 pair decided to drop out about 5 to 10 minutes into a rebuild.

                                In our comparison testing 8x 10K SAS drives in RAID 6 has a mean throughput of 800MiB/Second and about 250-450 IOPS per disk depending on the storage stack configuration.

                                SAS SSD would be anywhere from 25K IOPS per disk to 55K-75K IOPS per disk depending on whether read intensive, mixed use, or write intensive. There are some good deals out there on HGST SSDs (our preferred SAS SSD vendor).

                                Yeah, I've decided on RAID 6 if I am able to go with SSD drives. I am building out the server on Dell and purchasing through our VAR when it comes time to order.

                                Serious question, now that you seem to understand the concepts of what you may actually need.

                                Why R6? Your current workload seems to be nowhere near that level of redundancy, and does not appear to need it. Use a pair of SSD in R1 or a triplet in R5.

                                Yeah, getting new hardware is a time to evaluate this. But why the big jump to R6?

                                Edit: Yes, I realize hat your early posts stated you wanted to minimize any potential downtime.

                                DashrenderD dave247D 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                • DashrenderD
                                  Dashrender @JaredBusch
                                  last edited by

                                  @jaredbusch said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                  @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                  @phlipelder said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                  @dave247 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                  I'm planning the build on a new server. I originally intended on putting 8 x "900GB 15K RPM SAS 12Gbps 512e" drives into a RAID 10 config using an H740P adapter, but then I saw that there are quite a few options for SAS SSD. I haven't really learned too much about the differences of putting SSD in RAID and how it compares to HDD in RAID, so I wanted to see if anyone here (Scott) had any input on the matter.

                                  Example: Would it be worth putting, say, 6 x "1.6TB SSD SAS Mix Use 12Gbps 512e" drives into a RAID 10 instead? Is there a better approach with SSD in RAID?

                                  RAID 6 is the way to go. We lost a server after replacing a drive and it's RAID 10 pair decided to drop out about 5 to 10 minutes into a rebuild.

                                  In our comparison testing 8x 10K SAS drives in RAID 6 has a mean throughput of 800MiB/Second and about 250-450 IOPS per disk depending on the storage stack configuration.

                                  SAS SSD would be anywhere from 25K IOPS per disk to 55K-75K IOPS per disk depending on whether read intensive, mixed use, or write intensive. There are some good deals out there on HGST SSDs (our preferred SAS SSD vendor).

                                  Yeah, I've decided on RAID 6 if I am able to go with SSD drives. I am building out the server on Dell and purchasing through our VAR when it comes time to order.

                                  Serious question, now that you seem to understand the concepts of what you may actually need.

                                  Why R6? Your current workload seems to be nowhere near that level of redundancy, and does not appear to need it. Use a pair of SSD in R1 or a triplet in R5.

                                  Yeah, getting new hardware is a time to evaluate this. But why the big jump to R6?

                                  Edit: Yes, I realize hat your early posts stated you wanted to minimize any potential downtime.

                                  I was going to post exactly this.

                                  Your current array of 4 drives (I think you said you have 4) Is at a pretty large risk compared to a 4 drive SSD array (again the drives are at least one order of magnitude safer than most HDDs).

                                  Sure it might only be another $400 for that extra disk to give you RAID 6 vs RAID 5, but why spend it?

                                  One of the big things Scott harps at around here is correct spending. Personally I'm a bit surprised he hasn't brought this fact up already (OK he did a bit when I asked why one would look at SATA SSD RAID 10 instead of NVMe RAID 1 - costs).

                                  This really does boil down to math, but odds are of course never zero, and someone does have to be the one who suffers the failure outside of the typical odds from time to time.

                                  S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller
                                    last edited by

                                    R1 is definitely the best choice if you can do it. Get up to big enough drives and just get two.

                                    1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                    • 1
                                      1337 @scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by

                                      @scottalanmiller said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                      R1

                                      I like how you abbreviated the abbreviation there and saved two characters of redundant bandwidth!
                                      :thumbs_up: :thumbs_up: :thumbs_up:

                                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @1337
                                        last edited by

                                        @pete-s said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                        @scottalanmiller said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                        R1

                                        I like how you abbreviated the abbreviation there and saved two characters of redundant bandwidth!
                                        :thumbs_up: :thumbs_up: :thumbs_up:

                                        I took the time to document RAID notation years ago 🙂

                                        1 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • S
                                          StorageNinja Vendor @DustinB3403
                                          last edited by StorageNinja

                                          @dustinb3403 said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                          OBR5 is the standard if you are going to be using an SSD

                                          A URE isn't the only failure or corruption mode on a SSD. You can have drives that are not dead, but you want to shoot (firmware acting squirrel and you get 500ms). Also, 16TB SSDs that have deduplication and other data services in front of them can take a LONG TIME to rebuild (making that 7+1 a non-fun rebuild).

                                          Throw in people using cheap TLC and QLC (crap write speed and latency after the DRAM and SLC buffer exhausted) and I wouldn't say as a rule RAID 5 for traditional RAID groups of SSDs is always a good idea. If you have an SDS layer that wide stripes across multiple servers, and limits the URE domain to an individual object this is a bit more controlled. If I have a small log file that writes in a circle a lot (My Casandra/REDIS systems) erasure codes may not be worth it has given the volume of ingestion.

                                          I'm a bigger fan of RAID 5 on SSD in systems where I can pick and chose my RAID level on a single object, LUN etc so I can break up the write outliers that are small.

                                          DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • S
                                            StorageNinja Vendor @Dashrender
                                            last edited by

                                            @dashrender said in SAS SSD vs SAS HDD in a RAID 10?:

                                            This really does boil down to math, but odds are of course never zero, and someone does have to be the one who suffers the failure outside of the typical odds from time to time.

                                            Human error tends to be the biggest cause. People go to replace a drive while a rebuild is going on and swap the wrong drive.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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