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    RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?

    Starwind
    raid raid 0 raid 1 raid 5 raid 6 raid 10
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    • scottalanmiller
      scottalanmiller @dafyre last edited by scottalanmiller

      @dafyre said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

      Even the mention of RAIN in the conclusion does nothing against corrupt files or malicious activity to my knowledge.

      That's correct.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • J
        JackCPickup last edited by

        What a pointless article

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

          He thinks that RAID 5 is the standard?

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

            "Will the new and comparatively expensive alternatives like erasure coding, local reconstruction codes and Redundant Area of Independent Nodes prove to be more reliable and can RAID keep up with the latest generation of high capacity hard drives? – We think not. The new storage technology may be expensive but it definitely serves us with better data protection and high performance. So who will be the new king of the storage landscape; only time will tell."

            1. Erasure encoding is not new, that's RAID 5, for example. He's using a term he doesn't even know.
            2. RAIN has already moved into this place.

            This article looks like it was written in 2008 by someone just hearing about RAID in their first college class.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • RojoLoco
              RojoLoco last edited by

              Did anyone really expect a vendor posted article to be useful?

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

                @rojoloco said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                Did anyone really expect a vendor posted article to be useful?

                They have loads of good ones. This one was written by a guy who has nothing but a degree in the wrong field, and an entry level foot in the door of the helpdesk cert to claim as his credentials.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • jrc
                  jrc last edited by

                  There is a fundamental misunderstanding from this author about why RAID exists, and that is to offer some immunity to hard drive failure, nothing more, nothing less.

                  Reason being, you may have protection against hardware failure but when it comes to protection against corrupt files, errors or malicious activity, you have serious vulnerabilities.

                  Well no shit sherlock. RAID is purely to protect you against the first bit, a decent backup scheme protects against the second, it was never conceived of or designed to do more than protect against hardware failure.

                  Since there is an increased stress on the array when data bits are gathered to rebuild the failed and erroneous disc, there is the potential risk of double-disk fault and read error – hence the shift from RAID to more recent data storage mechanisms.

                  Umm, more recent data storage mechanisms? What, like RAID10? Any "mecahnism" that involves data spread out across lots of disks with some sort of redundancy is going to be a RAID array by definition. It is an Redundant Array (or collection) of Independent Disks after all.

                  What an idiotic out of touch (and date) article.

                  scottalanmiller 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • scottalanmiller
                    scottalanmiller @jrc last edited by

                    @jrc exactly, this is written like a homework assignment of someone who just heard about RAID in a freshman class, and wrote a really bad paper mostly lifted from Wikipedia (including the pictures), but without context and with a fundamentally wrong understanding of the topic. This would get a passing grade in a low end college, but only because it is "moderately acceptable homework", nothing more.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • jrc
                      jrc last edited by jrc

                      Also, isn't RAIN basically an array of RAIDs ??

                      And there, I posted a comment for the author on his article.

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

                        @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                        Also, isn't RAIN basically an array of RAIDs ??

                        No, that would be Network RAID.

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

                          @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                          @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                          Also, isn't RAIN basically an array of RAIDs ??

                          No, that would be Network RAID.

                          That how would you define RAIN? Wouldn't each node be a NAS of some sort, and more than likely that NAS would be configured with RAID, or am I missing something?

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

                            @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                            @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                            @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                            Also, isn't RAIN basically an array of RAIDs ??

                            No, that would be Network RAID.

                            That how would you define RAIN? Wouldn't each node be a NAS of some sort, and more than likely that NAS would be configured with RAID, or am I missing something?

                            It depends. RAIN is a blanket term for a lot of things, unlike RAID which is quite specific. You could make a great argument that Network RAID is a member of the RAIN family.

                            But in general terms, if you use Network RAID (treating each node as a disk) it's not called RAIN.

                            RAIN is assumed to have nodal awareness. RAID treats all members as drives and can't tell what is a node, and what is a drive.

                            dafyre 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • dafyre
                              dafyre @scottalanmiller last edited by

                              @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                              @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                              @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                              @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                              Also, isn't RAIN basically an array of RAIDs ??

                              No, that would be Network RAID.

                              That how would you define RAIN? Wouldn't each node be a NAS of some sort, and more than likely that NAS would be configured with RAID, or am I missing something?

                              It depends. RAIN is a blanket term for a lot of things, unlike RAID which is quite specific. You could make a great argument that Network RAID is a member of the RAIN family.

                              But in general terms, if you use Network RAID (treating each node as a disk) it's not called RAIN.

                              RAIN is assumed to have nodal awareness. RAID treats all members as drives and can't tell what is a node, and what is a drive.

                              What type of system would be a good example of RAIN? Gluster? Ceph? or am I totally missing the boat?

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

                                @dafyre said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                Also, isn't RAIN basically an array of RAIDs ??

                                No, that would be Network RAID.

                                That how would you define RAIN? Wouldn't each node be a NAS of some sort, and more than likely that NAS would be configured with RAID, or am I missing something?

                                It depends. RAIN is a blanket term for a lot of things, unlike RAID which is quite specific. You could make a great argument that Network RAID is a member of the RAIN family.

                                But in general terms, if you use Network RAID (treating each node as a disk) it's not called RAIN.

                                RAIN is assumed to have nodal awareness. RAID treats all members as drives and can't tell what is a node, and what is a drive.

                                What type of system would be a good example of RAIN? Gluster? Ceph? or am I totally missing the boat?

                                Yes, Cluster, CEPH, SCRIBE, Exablox... all RAIN. Traditional RAIN by everyone's standards.

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

                                  @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                  @dafyre said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                  @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                  @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                  @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                  @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                  Also, isn't RAIN basically an array of RAIDs ??

                                  No, that would be Network RAID.

                                  That how would you define RAIN? Wouldn't each node be a NAS of some sort, and more than likely that NAS would be configured with RAID, or am I missing something?

                                  It depends. RAIN is a blanket term for a lot of things, unlike RAID which is quite specific. You could make a great argument that Network RAID is a member of the RAIN family.

                                  But in general terms, if you use Network RAID (treating each node as a disk) it's not called RAIN.

                                  RAIN is assumed to have nodal awareness. RAID treats all members as drives and can't tell what is a node, and what is a drive.

                                  What type of system would be a good example of RAIN? Gluster? Ceph? or am I totally missing the boat?

                                  Yes, Cluster, CEPH, SCRIBE, Exablox... all RAIN. Traditional RAIN by everyone's standards.

                                  I'm familiar with Gluster and Ceph. Exablox is not open source...

                                  SCRIBE is done by @scale -- so it's not open source, right?

                                  scottalanmiller 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • pchiodo
                                    pchiodo last edited by

                                    Well, I think you guys really RAIN'd on this guys parade. Good work.

                                    scottalanmiller 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                    • scottalanmiller
                                      scottalanmiller @dafyre last edited by

                                      @dafyre said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                      @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                      @dafyre said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                      @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                      @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                      @scottalanmiller said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                      @jrc said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                      Also, isn't RAIN basically an array of RAIDs ??

                                      No, that would be Network RAID.

                                      That how would you define RAIN? Wouldn't each node be a NAS of some sort, and more than likely that NAS would be configured with RAID, or am I missing something?

                                      It depends. RAIN is a blanket term for a lot of things, unlike RAID which is quite specific. You could make a great argument that Network RAID is a member of the RAIN family.

                                      But in general terms, if you use Network RAID (treating each node as a disk) it's not called RAIN.

                                      RAIN is assumed to have nodal awareness. RAID treats all members as drives and can't tell what is a node, and what is a drive.

                                      What type of system would be a good example of RAIN? Gluster? Ceph? or am I totally missing the boat?

                                      Yes, Cluster, CEPH, SCRIBE, Exablox... all RAIN. Traditional RAIN by everyone's standards.

                                      I'm familiar with Gluster and Ceph. Exablox is not open source...

                                      SCRIBE is done by @scale -- so it's not open source, right?

                                      Correct, it is closed source.

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

                                        @pchiodo said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                        Well, I think you guys really RAIN'd on this guys parade. Good work.

                                        You were hoping for a RAIDing party?

                                        pchiodo dafyre 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • pchiodo
                                          pchiodo @scottalanmiller last edited by

                                          @scottalanmiller With this group? You're just spinning in place.

                                          coliver 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • coliver
                                            coliver @pchiodo last edited by

                                            @pchiodo said in RAID - the king of the storage landscape or legacy?:

                                            @scottalanmiller With this group? You're just spinning in place.

                                            Oh... that's a good one.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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