- Joined
- Apr 6, 2015
- Messages
- 253 (0.07/day)
- Location
- Japan
System Name | ChronicleScienceWorkStation |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Threadripper 1950X |
Motherboard | Asrock X399 Taichi |
Cooling | Noctua U14S-TR4 |
Memory | G.Skill DDR4 3200 C14 16GB*4 |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon VII |
Storage | Samsung 970 Pro*1, Kingston A2000 1TB*2 RAID 0, HGST 8TB*5 RAID 6 |
Case | Lian Li PC-A75X |
Power Supply | Corsair AX1600i |
Software | Proxmox 6.2 |
Hello,
Background:
I am recently upgrading the storage of my workstation.
To begin with the background, this will be used as a 2nd copy of some critical experimental data for myself, where the first copy will be in the lab computers.
While losing them on this workstation won't probably kill me, but I prefer it to be as reliable as possible for a peace of mind. Therefore over RAID 10 with 4 drives, I prefer RAID 6 where it will be larger and can stand 2 drives failure.
Size requirement:
When the experiment is running it can generate hundreds of GBs a day, that's why I try to get a relatively large array in terms of volume. I am buying 5x 8TB drives and hoping to set up a RAID 6 array.
This will give me 24 TB which should be good enough as a buffer (I will remove data as soon as they are analysed and found to be not useful).
Speed requirement:
Actually it is quite low, as I push the data through internet after the acquisition, and my internet is just 300 Mbps.
Still I hope to get as much as 200 MB/s+ throughput from the array.
My workstation's current spec:
CPU: Threadripper 1950X
RAM: 64 GB DDR4 quad-channel
MB: Asrock X399 with 8 SATA ports
OS: ubuntu 16.04 LTS
Questions: Should I get a hardware RAID card like one from LSI?
I found this:
https://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16816118169
It seems to be reasonably high performance, but I have to make sure the 8 TB drives will work with it.
However, I also keep seeing people mentioning the new CPUs are strong enough to do RAID without the hardware controller nowadays. Maybe it's true for Threadripper?
I won't mind a performance hit to other processes when a throughput happening.
What concerns me more, however, is the time it takes to rebuild. When 1 or 2 drives stopped working, I was wondering if software RAID will take much longer for this.
Thanks for reading.
Background:
I am recently upgrading the storage of my workstation.
To begin with the background, this will be used as a 2nd copy of some critical experimental data for myself, where the first copy will be in the lab computers.
While losing them on this workstation won't probably kill me, but I prefer it to be as reliable as possible for a peace of mind. Therefore over RAID 10 with 4 drives, I prefer RAID 6 where it will be larger and can stand 2 drives failure.
Size requirement:
When the experiment is running it can generate hundreds of GBs a day, that's why I try to get a relatively large array in terms of volume. I am buying 5x 8TB drives and hoping to set up a RAID 6 array.
This will give me 24 TB which should be good enough as a buffer (I will remove data as soon as they are analysed and found to be not useful).
Speed requirement:
Actually it is quite low, as I push the data through internet after the acquisition, and my internet is just 300 Mbps.
Still I hope to get as much as 200 MB/s+ throughput from the array.
My workstation's current spec:
CPU: Threadripper 1950X
RAM: 64 GB DDR4 quad-channel
MB: Asrock X399 with 8 SATA ports
OS: ubuntu 16.04 LTS
Questions: Should I get a hardware RAID card like one from LSI?
I found this:
https://www.newegg.ca/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16816118169
It seems to be reasonably high performance, but I have to make sure the 8 TB drives will work with it.
However, I also keep seeing people mentioning the new CPUs are strong enough to do RAID without the hardware controller nowadays. Maybe it's true for Threadripper?
I won't mind a performance hit to other processes when a throughput happening.
What concerns me more, however, is the time it takes to rebuild. When 1 or 2 drives stopped working, I was wondering if software RAID will take much longer for this.
Thanks for reading.
Last edited: