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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Pasokon Koubou
- Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 04:10:09 +0900
- From: Stephen Lee <sl@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Pasokon Koubou
- References: <20021218091315.GF13340@example.com> <3E009861.D98047AB@example.com>
Botond Botyanszki <9915104t@example.com> wrote: > Jonathan Byrne wrote: > > onboard Promise RAID (0 and 1), > any experience with IDE RAID? Recently there was an article on /. about this, > the comments were kinda mixed. The computer I'm writing this has a pair of mirrored IDE disks. I had disks from IBM, Maxtor, and Seagate fail on me within last year. Not completely, but S.M.A.R.T. errors (at least they made THAT right), and I am able to get the data off the disks before getting a replacement, but these experience is enough to make me not trust recent hardware. With the harddisk manufacturers cutting warranty on most disks to 1 year (and you probably get less if you buy bulk from Akihabara), it is apparaent that they don't trust their hardware, as well. On the topic of RAID cards, I have used cards based on HPT370, SIL0680 and Promise Fasttrack 100. I believe all of these are 'firmware/driver' RAID cards, i.e. the card is not much more than a few IDE channels, the RAID part is done with firmware/driver and runs on your CPU. It has the convinence that you can boot from a stripe set, but not more if you use linux's software RAID. There isn't much to gain from using such a card except that you get more IDE channels, which can be nice sometimes. Now, the BIOS/drivers' (for a certain non-linux OS that shall remain unnamed) quality vary. HPT is kind of hit or miss, I had problems with IRQ sharing and ACPI. For a second machine I first got SIL which is cheap and crap. I tried to add a disk and use it to mirror the existing one, and as far as I can tell the driver insists on finishing the mirror before letting me boot. So I left the computer on and went to sleep. It didn't finish after half a day. I'm not going to spent half a day on mirroring if one of my disk breaks, so I got a promise and it works well for me (but it is relatively expensive). Oh, I also second (third?) the opinion that it is better to build your own. Not so much for upgradability (usually there will be better motherboard/RAM by the time you want to upgrade your CPU, for example), but so that you know what component are going into your PC, and can get parts that works well with linux. Stephen
- References:
- Re: [tlug] Pasokon Koubou
- From: Jonathan Byrne
- Re: [tlug] Pasokon Koubou
- From: Botond Botyanszki
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