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    Why are local drives better

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @Grey
      last edited by

      @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

      @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

      @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

      ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

      You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

      Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

      Local bus can always go faster. Any remote disk always has to traverse the local bus, but with higher latency. Remember that any remote disk is local to itself. So any local limitation applies universally, and all remote limitations are on top of that.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • travisdh1T
        travisdh1 @Grey
        last edited by

        @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

        @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

        @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

        @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

        @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

        ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

        You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

        Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

        So, just like the cache on a local controller?

        Does your local controller have a 256gb cache?

        If I've got that much ram assigned to it, sure, why not?

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

          @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

          @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

          @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

          @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

          @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

          ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

          You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

          Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

          So, just like the cache on a local controller?

          Does your local controller have a 256gb cache?

          It can. If your SAN can have a cache that big, your local storage can. Because that cache is local on the SAN.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @travisdh1
            last edited by

            @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

            @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

            @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

            @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

            @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

            @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

            ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

            You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

            Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

            So, just like the cache on a local controller?

            Does your local controller have a 256gb cache?

            If I've got that much ram assigned to it, sure, why not?

            I've worked on local storage systems that have that much cache just recently, in fact.

            travisdh1T GreyG 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • travisdh1T
              travisdh1 @scottalanmiller
              last edited by

              @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

              @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

              @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

              @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

              @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

              @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

              @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

              ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

              You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

              Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

              So, just like the cache on a local controller?

              Does your local controller have a 256gb cache?

              If I've got that much ram assigned to it, sure, why not?

              I've worked on local storage systems that have that much cache just recently, in fact.

              Nice. Was that a hardware controller or software based?

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

                @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

                @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

                @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

                You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

                Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

                So, just like the cache on a local controller?

                Does your local controller have a 256gb cache?

                If I've got that much ram assigned to it, sure, why not?

                I've worked on local storage systems that have that much cache just recently, in fact.

                Cool. Many of the systems I've seen deployed and worked with are so old that a 1gb cache is considered exotic.

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @travisdh1
                  last edited by

                  @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

                  @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                  @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                  @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                  @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                  @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

                  @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                  ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

                  You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

                  Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

                  So, just like the cache on a local controller?

                  Does your local controller have a 256gb cache?

                  If I've got that much ram assigned to it, sure, why not?

                  I've worked on local storage systems that have that much cache just recently, in fact.

                  Nice. Was that a hardware controller or software based?

                  Software. Which is pretty much the only thing for enterprise systems.

                  travisdh1T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @Grey
                    last edited by

                    @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                    @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

                    @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                    @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                    @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                    @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                    @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

                    @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                    ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

                    You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

                    Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

                    So, just like the cache on a local controller?

                    Does your local controller have a 256gb cache?

                    If I've got that much ram assigned to it, sure, why not?

                    I've worked on local storage systems that have that much cache just recently, in fact.

                    Cool. Many of the systems I've seen deployed and worked with are so old that a 1gb cache is considered exotic.

                    That's only on commodity hardware with hardware RAID. That's generally what SAN and NAS skip to get around those limitations.

                    GreyG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • GreyG
                      Grey @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

                      @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

                      @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                      @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                      @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                      @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                      @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

                      @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                      ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

                      You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

                      Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

                      So, just like the cache on a local controller?

                      Does your local controller have a 256gb cache?

                      If I've got that much ram assigned to it, sure, why not?

                      I've worked on local storage systems that have that much cache just recently, in fact.

                      Cool. Many of the systems I've seen deployed and worked with are so old that a 1gb cache is considered exotic.

                      That's only on commodity hardware with hardware RAID. That's generally what SAN and NAS skip to get around those limitations.

                      http://i.imgur.com/V1FlqCf.jpg

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • travisdh1T
                        travisdh1 @scottalanmiller
                        last edited by

                        @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

                        @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

                        @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                        @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                        @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                        @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                        @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

                        @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                        ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

                        You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

                        Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

                        So, just like the cache on a local controller?

                        Does your local controller have a 256gb cache?

                        If I've got that much ram assigned to it, sure, why not?

                        I've worked on local storage systems that have that much cache just recently, in fact.

                        Nice. Was that a hardware controller or software based?

                        Software. Which is pretty much the only thing for enterprise systems.

                        I should've known. It's so easy to make and use a huge cache with md, more system memory = more cache.

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

                          What local storage approaches these days tend to skip the mammoth cache approach and instead go for insanely fast SSDs because of the lack of latency between the system and the disks. You can get millions of IOPS from local disks even before the cache. So often the cache is kept small only to absorb some writes rather than for read.

                          But having the cache is very possible, just not always practical.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • MattSpellerM
                            MattSpeller @Grey
                            last edited by

                            @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                            @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                            @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                            @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                            @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                            @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                            @Grey While I agree, I agree for different reasoning.

                            The array protection, isn't something that I think needs to be thought of in the traditional sense. I do agree that the local drive needs to be excluded from anything but secure services. So ransomware etc couldn't mess it up.

                            Maybe we're thinking on different levels. Are you only talking about DAS or is there something else here?

                            Yea.... haha

                            sorry for being so vague, just trying to get some ideas. Ignore raid. Its not an item to consider.

                            So, this is a workstation?

                            It could be workstation, it could also be a server. Just looking for possible use cases of a locally attached disk.

                            The only reason is for speed, in my world. You could do an SSD DAS (array or not) and it will be faster than any NAS, until you get up to the level of a fiber network SAN that has more transfer speed than the SAS or SATA drives in question, which may max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM cache could transfer larger files faster than DAS using SATA 3 which maxes out at 6GBit. The problem, obviously, is contention so you might never see those max speeds on the SAN in the real world production environment.

                            I guess it all depends on how you're going to use your DAS, and if it's just a machine with a single drive, that screams workstation (that you don't care about the data or uptime is implied by the lack of an array). If you want to make a faster workstation, get a pair of SSDs and run them in RAID0.

                            ^^ speaking of (and hopefully not a tangent)

                            Anyone heard of a sata upgrade/replacement coming down the line?

                            travisdh1T scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • travisdh1T
                              travisdh1 @MattSpeller
                              last edited by

                              @MattSpeller said in Why are local drives better:

                              @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                              @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                              @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                              @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                              @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                              @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                              @Grey While I agree, I agree for different reasoning.

                              The array protection, isn't something that I think needs to be thought of in the traditional sense. I do agree that the local drive needs to be excluded from anything but secure services. So ransomware etc couldn't mess it up.

                              Maybe we're thinking on different levels. Are you only talking about DAS or is there something else here?

                              Yea.... haha

                              sorry for being so vague, just trying to get some ideas. Ignore raid. Its not an item to consider.

                              So, this is a workstation?

                              It could be workstation, it could also be a server. Just looking for possible use cases of a locally attached disk.

                              The only reason is for speed, in my world. You could do an SSD DAS (array or not) and it will be faster than any NAS, until you get up to the level of a fiber network SAN that has more transfer speed than the SAS or SATA drives in question, which may max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM cache could transfer larger files faster than DAS using SATA 3 which maxes out at 6GBit. The problem, obviously, is contention so you might never see those max speeds on the SAN in the real world production environment.

                              I guess it all depends on how you're going to use your DAS, and if it's just a machine with a single drive, that screams workstation (that you don't care about the data or uptime is implied by the lack of an array). If you want to make a faster workstation, get a pair of SSDs and run them in RAID0.

                              ^^ speaking of (and hopefully not a tangent)

                              Anyone heard of a sata upgrade/replacement coming down the line?

                              According to the Wiki Pedia article, SAS4 will be hitting 22.5 Gbit/s this year, but SATA will still be stuck at 16 Gbit/s.

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

                                @MattSpeller said in Why are local drives better:

                                @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                @Grey While I agree, I agree for different reasoning.

                                The array protection, isn't something that I think needs to be thought of in the traditional sense. I do agree that the local drive needs to be excluded from anything but secure services. So ransomware etc couldn't mess it up.

                                Maybe we're thinking on different levels. Are you only talking about DAS or is there something else here?

                                Yea.... haha

                                sorry for being so vague, just trying to get some ideas. Ignore raid. Its not an item to consider.

                                So, this is a workstation?

                                It could be workstation, it could also be a server. Just looking for possible use cases of a locally attached disk.

                                The only reason is for speed, in my world. You could do an SSD DAS (array or not) and it will be faster than any NAS, until you get up to the level of a fiber network SAN that has more transfer speed than the SAS or SATA drives in question, which may max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM cache could transfer larger files faster than DAS using SATA 3 which maxes out at 6GBit. The problem, obviously, is contention so you might never see those max speeds on the SAN in the real world production environment.

                                I guess it all depends on how you're going to use your DAS, and if it's just a machine with a single drive, that screams workstation (that you don't care about the data or uptime is implied by the lack of an array). If you want to make a faster workstation, get a pair of SSDs and run them in RAID0.

                                ^^ speaking of (and hopefully not a tangent)

                                Anyone heard of a sata upgrade/replacement coming down the line?

                                I thought M.2 already replaced it.

                                travisdh1T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • travisdh1T
                                  travisdh1 @scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

                                  @MattSpeller said in Why are local drives better:

                                  @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                  @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                  @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                  @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                  @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                  @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                  @Grey While I agree, I agree for different reasoning.

                                  The array protection, isn't something that I think needs to be thought of in the traditional sense. I do agree that the local drive needs to be excluded from anything but secure services. So ransomware etc couldn't mess it up.

                                  Maybe we're thinking on different levels. Are you only talking about DAS or is there something else here?

                                  Yea.... haha

                                  sorry for being so vague, just trying to get some ideas. Ignore raid. Its not an item to consider.

                                  So, this is a workstation?

                                  It could be workstation, it could also be a server. Just looking for possible use cases of a locally attached disk.

                                  The only reason is for speed, in my world. You could do an SSD DAS (array or not) and it will be faster than any NAS, until you get up to the level of a fiber network SAN that has more transfer speed than the SAS or SATA drives in question, which may max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM cache could transfer larger files faster than DAS using SATA 3 which maxes out at 6GBit. The problem, obviously, is contention so you might never see those max speeds on the SAN in the real world production environment.

                                  I guess it all depends on how you're going to use your DAS, and if it's just a machine with a single drive, that screams workstation (that you don't care about the data or uptime is implied by the lack of an array). If you want to make a faster workstation, get a pair of SSDs and run them in RAID0.

                                  ^^ speaking of (and hopefully not a tangent)

                                  Anyone heard of a sata upgrade/replacement coming down the line?

                                  I thought M.2 already replaced it.

                                  That's the problem with the M.2 interface. Is it using SATA or PCIe? It can be either, you have to actually read documentation to figure it out.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • F
                                    Francesco Provino @travisdh1
                                    last edited by

                                    @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

                                    @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                                    @scottalanmiller said in Why are local drives better:

                                    @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                                    @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                    @travisdh1 said in Why are local drives better:

                                    @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                    @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

                                    @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                    ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

                                    You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

                                    Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

                                    So, just like the cache on a local controller?

                                    Does your local controller have a 256gb cache?

                                    If I've got that much ram assigned to it, sure, why not?

                                    I've worked on local storage systems that have that much cache just recently, in fact.

                                    Nice. Was that a hardware controller or software based?

                                    Software. Which is pretty much the only thing for enterprise systems.

                                    I should've known. It's so easy to make and use a huge cache with md, more system memory = more cache.

                                    Using "md"? What do you mean? Linux automatically cache I/O with available ram AFAIK.

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

                                      @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                      @Dashrender said in Why are local drives better:

                                      @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                      ay max at 3, 6 or 3.2 16 Gbit/s (1969 MB/s). Ergo, a 10GB FCoE SAN that's running OBR10 or Raid6 with a large SSD/RAM c

                                      You can literally use local disk for any thing you can use remote disk. So I'm not really sure what you're digging for.

                                      Transfer rates. A local bus will max at 6, while a SAN on a 10 GB link (or dual 10s, whatever) can go higher as the node can cache in RAM and then write back to the drives that are local to the SAN at the slower, local rate.

                                      I'm coming back to this thread after a while - so I see that Scott has already mentioned that you can get 10 Gb locally.

                                      The thing that those of us that aren't Scott have to remember, NAS/SAN is always second to local. Anything those can do, local can do better. 😉 Scott's already given the reasons.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                      • H
                                        Harry Lui
                                        last edited by Harry Lui

                                        Less COST makes local drives better.
                                        Less network traffic makes local drives better.
                                        Less switch/jack/cable needed makes local drives better.
                                        Less IP address/setup/maintenance/update/firmware makes local drives better.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • T
                                          Texkonc @DustinB3403
                                          last edited by

                                          @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                          @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                          @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                          @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                          @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                          @Grey While I agree, I agree for different reasoning.

                                          The array protection, isn't something that I think needs to be thought of in the traditional sense. I do agree that the local drive needs to be excluded from anything but secure services. So ransomware etc couldn't mess it up.

                                          Maybe we're thinking on different levels. Are you only talking about DAS or is there something else here?

                                          Yea.... haha

                                          sorry for being so vague, just trying to get some ideas. Ignore raid. Its not an item to consider.

                                          So, this is a workstation?

                                          It could be workstation, it could also be a server. Just looking for possible use cases of a locally attached disk.

                                          Workstation without a Hard Disk would be SSD or Dumb Terminal 🙂

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

                                            @Texkonc said in Why are local drives better:

                                            @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                            @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                            @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                            @Grey said in Why are local drives better:

                                            @DustinB3403 said in Why are local drives better:

                                            @Grey While I agree, I agree for different reasoning.

                                            The array protection, isn't something that I think needs to be thought of in the traditional sense. I do agree that the local drive needs to be excluded from anything but secure services. So ransomware etc couldn't mess it up.

                                            Maybe we're thinking on different levels. Are you only talking about DAS or is there something else here?

                                            Yea.... haha

                                            sorry for being so vague, just trying to get some ideas. Ignore raid. Its not an item to consider.

                                            So, this is a workstation?

                                            It could be workstation, it could also be a server. Just looking for possible use cases of a locally attached disk.

                                            Workstation without a Hard Disk would be SSD or Dumb Terminal 🙂

                                            You can have a workstation with iSCSI or similar remote disk for booting. Used to be a thing, actually. Not so much any more. I know a company that claims to do this in Toronto as they think it is highly beneficial (hint: it is not.)

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