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Re: RAID5 or RAID6

 
Bakxm_1
New Member

RAID5 or RAID6

Hi all,

I'm looking for any insights you want to share on whether to chose RAID6 over RAID5. Performance (I/O) is not an issue. It's the number of drives in a single array, failure and rebuild reliability where i'm after.
Is there a rule-of-thumb at what number of drives which RAID level to choose ?
If there are whitepapers or hard numbers, they are more than welcome.

We're thinking of creating 6 disk and 14 disk arrays in RAID5 because of legacy configurations, but these were only 3 disk arrays (U320).

New hardware is DL380G7 with 146GB SAS disks.

TIA, regards Marcel
9 REPLIES 9
Alzhy
Honored Contributor

Re: RAID5 or RAID6

On what controller?
Is this a HW based array you're planning -- a SmartArray based one or Software RAID (what OS?)

Hakuna Matata.
Bakxm_1
New Member

Re: RAID5 or RAID6

RAID array will be based on the onboard P400(?) Array controller.
The OS that will be run is WS08r2
Alzhy
Honored Contributor

Re: RAID5 or RAID6

I'd go with RAID5 regardless of whether it is HW based or Software based. And no wider than 7+1P. And configure HotSpares instead.

Drives and Controllers these days have smarts in them (SMART std) and should have proactiveness to kick in a sparing operation. Also, the drives in question are "small" and rebuild times should be fast.

Now if my disks are 1 to 2 TB, then I would think twice even at 3+1P.. I'd go with RAID6 still.

Ensure you have aerting mechanisms in place though (multiple emails) to make you aware when a sparing or rebuild has happened so you can promptly do the physical replacement.

Caveat Emptor though.


Hakuna Matata.
Bakxm_1
New Member

Re: RAID5 or RAID6

If I understand correctly, it's more of a disk size (>1TB) issue when making a choice between RAID5 or 6 than it is the total number of disks in the array ?

TIA
Alzhy
Honored Contributor

Re: RAID5 or RAID6

Yes -- that is STILL my current basis for deciding between RAID5 and RAID6.

Unless of course your risk acceptance level is pretty low.

I build NASes and Fileservers on Linux/OpenSolaris for friends and special clients using commodity parts - PC motherboards and consumer SATA drives. For uber-critical data with no special performance requirements -- it is always 3+1P with HotSpare or 2D+2D (RAID1+0) with drive sizes of 120 to 750GB. Above that, It is always RAID6 for critical filesystems. For Media Serving duties where loss of data is not critical (i.e. DVR application) - it is usualy just RAID5 even for 2TB Drives (very long build times though but I use ZFS mostly to do away with the long build times)
Hakuna Matata.
Bakxm_1
New Member

Re: RAID5 or RAID6

Thanks for your insights!

Slight change of rules... ;)
Server is for file serving, and employees are around 200. Still use 5+1P (RAID5), or go for RAID6 (5+2P)?

Are there any whitepapers that deal with failure rates and chances on failure in both situations?
Alzhy
Honored Contributor

Re: RAID5 or RAID6

Nope. no WP that I am aware of. I'd go with 7+1 if the P400i allows it.

One thing you can be aware about is MTBFs. Usually drives obey MTBF ratings... for SAS enterprise drives -- it is usually over 1 million hours.

If MTBF is just about 70 to 80 percent -- I usually start thinking of being pro-active with spares and looking at SMART diagnostics
Hakuna Matata.
gregersenj
Honored Contributor

Re: RAID5 or RAID6

Here's some reading stuff on the subject.
http://h50146.www5.hp.com/products/storage/whitepaper/pdfs/c00386950.pdf

But something to take into consideration, is the rebuild time with large and slow disks.
It could take more than a week.

BR
/jag

Accept or Kudo

Don Mallory
Trusted Contributor

Re: RAID5 or RAID6

It's not so much of an issue of drive size, but time to rebuild (which drive size impacts significantly).

This is not so much of a problem with only using internal drive bays as opposed to full external enclosures (with 20 or more drives available.)

You will also find that there is a notable write penalty by using RAID6 over RAID5. There are lots of documents on this (google is your friend.)

I agree with Alzhy though, 6+1+HS would be better than 7+1. If you were really worried and the write penalty wasn't a problem, 5+2+HS would be okay as well. Extra parity can never beat an online hot spare in my opinion.

For MTBFs, be careful. These are caclulated, not always tested values. They also mean, that if you have 1 million drives, and an MTBF of 1m hours, you should see one drive fail per hour. In particular, I've seen this with large compute clusters and it maps perfectly to the MTBF (186000hrs, 250 nodes = 1 failure per month, 1000 nodes, 1 per week.)

Best regards,
Don