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    SATA vs NL-SAS vs SAS For New Array

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    • JaredBuschJ
      JaredBusch
      last edited by

      I run more than one client on 7.2k SATA drives. DC, Exchange, SQL.

      My recent purchases have been NL SAS since Xbyte has them cheap.

      DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • brianlittlejohnB
        brianlittlejohn
        last edited by

        I run 7200 SATA almost everywhere...

        S MattSpellerM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • BRRABillB
          BRRABill
          last edited by

          I guess my thinking was faster is always better.

          If money was not an object, would this be true? Are the decisions to go with 7.2K purely financial based?

          Or is there really very little difference in all the drives for these kinds of applications? I mean obviously SSD is super fast, but perhaps not needed.

          DashrenderD scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • DashrenderD
            Dashrender @JaredBusch
            last edited by

            @JaredBusch said:

            I run more than one client on 7.2k SATA drives. DC, Exchange, SQL.

            My recent purchases have been NL SAS since Xbyte has them cheap.

            I agree with JB - I do the same - I currently have 6 VMs running on an 8 drive RAID 10 array of 7.2K NL SAS drives with no problems.

            But you did mention a data server - is that just for file? or a DB?

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • DashrenderD
              Dashrender @BRRABill
              last edited by

              @BRRABill said:

              I guess my thinking was faster is always better.

              If money was not an object, would this be true? Are the decisions to go with 7.2K purely financial based?

              Or is there really very little difference in all the drives for these kinds of applications? I mean obviously SSD is super fast, but perhaps not needed.

              If money is no object - why not by Dell SSDs and be done with it? lol because money is an object. 😉

              You'd need to look at an IOP difference from 7.2k vs 10K - 15K today is almost never done because the drive price is pretty darned close to SSD, and with SSDs ability to start using RAID 5 again, can save you a bundle.

              You're load is what matters - if you don't know the load, you don't know what you'll really need.

              BRRABillB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • BRRABillB
                BRRABill @Dashrender
                last edited by

                @Dashrender said:

                You're load is what matters - if you don't know the load, you don't know what you'll really need.

                But since everyone seems to be running on the lower speed drives, what kind of load would ever require the higher speed?

                Is it a small percentage that ever needs it?

                I understand it is all based on load. But do you load test every server, and then always just end up with 7.2 or 10K?

                Sounds like 10K NL-SAS might just be the way to go.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • DashrenderD
                  Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  You may have heard about servers with hundreds of VMs running on them? Those servers definitely have higher IOPs needs, perhaps not really over what HDDs can provide, but assuming it's just a throughput thing and not the amount of storage thing, SSDs can do with with fewer devices, meaning less heat, fewer parts to fail, etc.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • BRRABillB
                    BRRABill
                    last edited by

                    So the other main question I have is ... RAID1 or RAID10.

                    I know the consensus is always RAID10. But I also know that @scottalanmiller always says to "be planning our arrays holistically and not after the number of drives is determined" so since I am at square 1 here, i'm thinking of options.

                    Since my storage requirements are low, would it be acceptable to just buy 2 larger drives and put them in a RAID1 array?

                    To do (4) 600GB 10K drives would cost ($800). I could also buy (2) 1.2TB 10K drives for ($660). Same amount of storage.

                    Even as a better example, are the NL-SAS drives. The 1TB drive is $199. The 3TB version of the same drive is $159. (Based on ... inventory, I guess?) Could have more storage for less than half the cost.

                    I don't want to overcomplicate my situation. (I've been told I like to try to implement enterprise solutions in a SOHO space, which is a mistake.) But I know RAID10 is often considered "the safest of all choices, it is fast and safe".

                    But would RAID1 also work here, or am I nuts?

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender
                      last edited by

                      Wholistically. So the question is, how many IOPs do you need? Let's assume you need 400 IOPs. Can you get 400 IOPs from 2 larger HDD drives? probably not.

                      Standard 7.2K NL SAS gives between 75-125 IOPs per drive. Right away we can see that we can't get enough IOPs using RAID 1, since two drives won't give us the needed 400 IOPs.

                      Assuming low end you need 6 drives in a RAID 0 to get over 400 IOPs, on the high side you need 4. Now with RAID 10, you get 1/2 of all drives for write and all drives for read, so working toward the write side, you would need between 8 and 12 drives to cover your bases on RAID 10. This tells us we need RAID 10.

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

                        @Dashrender All of that completely ignores the onboard cache.

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

                          @brianlittlejohn Its like an extra $30 to get a NL-SAS over an Enterprise SATA drive....

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

                            With De-duplication and Compression and RAID 5/6 Flash drives are cheaper than 10K RPM drives. We did the price comparisons with VSAN 6.2 came out and 10K is officially "dead" unless all your data is encrypted or something.

                            DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • BRRABillB
                              BRRABill @StorageNinja
                              last edited by

                              @John-Nicholson said:

                              @brianlittlejohn Its like an extra $30 to get a NL-SAS over an Enterprise SATA drive....

                              Yeah the NL-SAS stuff is crazy cheap.

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

                                @BRRABill It is also CRAZY slow (like Low latency tape is what we call it). Useless for most workloads without a large cache in front of it.

                                BRRABillB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • BRRABillB
                                  BRRABill @StorageNinja
                                  last edited by

                                  @John-Nicholson said:

                                  @BRRABill It is also CRAZY slow (like Low latency tape is what we call it). Useless for most workloads without a large cache in front of it.

                                  Then how is it so many people here are using it for their servers?

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

                                    @BRRABill said:

                                    @John-Nicholson said:

                                    @BRRABill It is also CRAZY slow (like Low latency tape is what we call it). Useless for most workloads without a large cache in front of it.

                                    Then how is it so many people here are using it for their servers?

                                    Perspective. I believe @John-Nicholson works ina large place running tons of workloads on each host.

                                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                    • DashrenderD
                                      Dashrender @StorageNinja
                                      last edited by

                                      @John-Nicholson said:

                                      With De-duplication and Compression and RAID 5/6 Flash drives are cheaper than 10K RPM drives. We did the price comparisons with VSAN 6.2 came out and 10K is officially "dead" unless all your data is encrypted or something.

                                      What are you using for De-Dup and compression? Is that something native in hypervisors now? if not, it adds to the cost column.

                                      PSX_DefectorP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • DashrenderD
                                        Dashrender @JaredBusch
                                        last edited by

                                        @JaredBusch said:

                                        @BRRABill said:

                                        @John-Nicholson said:

                                        @BRRABill It is also CRAZY slow (like Low latency tape is what we call it). Useless for most workloads without a large cache in front of it.

                                        Then how is it so many people here are using it for their servers?

                                        Perspective. I believe @John-Nicholson works ina large place running tons of workloads on each host.

                                        Agreed - HDD might be dead for large companies - big players, but SMB - we have at least a year left, maybe 2.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • PSX_DefectorP
                                          PSX_Defector @Dashrender
                                          last edited by PSX_Defector

                                          @Dashrender said:

                                          @John-Nicholson said:

                                          With De-duplication and Compression and RAID 5/6 Flash drives are cheaper than 10K RPM drives. We did the price comparisons with VSAN 6.2 came out and 10K is officially "dead" unless all your data is encrypted or something.

                                          What are you using for De-Dup and compression? Is that something native in hypervisors now? if not, it adds to the cost column.

                                          There's dedupe in Win2K12 at the OS level, assuming you are deduplicating NTFS file systems. If you are using encryption, that's the only way you will be able to dedupe data.

                                          We use Pure Storage SANs, which support native dedupe at the block level. And it appears that VSAN supports block level dedupe as well.

                                          https://blogs.vmware.com/virtualblocks/2016/02/10/whats-new-vmware-virtual-san-6-2/

                                          DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • DashrenderD
                                            Dashrender @PSX_Defector
                                            last edited by

                                            @PSX_Defector said:

                                            @Dashrender said:

                                            @John-Nicholson said:

                                            With De-duplication and Compression and RAID 5/6 Flash drives are cheaper than 10K RPM drives. We did the price comparisons with VSAN 6.2 came out and 10K is officially "dead" unless all your data is encrypted or something.

                                            What are you using for De-Dup and compression? Is that something native in hypervisors now? if not, it adds to the cost column.

                                            There's dedupe in Win2K12 at the OS level, assuming you are deduplicating NTFS file systems. If you are using encryption, that's the only way you will be able to dedupe data.

                                            We use Pure Storage SANs, which support native dedupe at the block level. And it appears that VSAN supports block level dedupe as well.

                                            https://blogs.vmware.com/virtualblocks/2016/02/10/whats-new-vmware-virtual-san-6-2/

                                            Well, you're paying a LOT for those hardware platform - so at that point the extra space gained makes the SSD definitely more worthwhile performance wise. But not many SMB's are dealing with those things.

                                            PSX_DefectorP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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