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    Hot Swap SSD for HDD in a RAID 1 array

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    • travisdh1T
      travisdh1 @Dashrender
      last edited by

      @Dashrender said:

      For those that don't like this idea - do you also say the same thing about Drobo? They even recommend this process when you need to increase your storage with new drives.

      I guess if the RAID controller knows the difference, then it shouldn't cause any issue. Sounds like they already have good backups, so they're covered even if something goes wrong.

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

        @pchiodo said:

        @travisdh1 - We have a pretty heavy reliance on the DC, more notably the DNS due to some in house app dependencies. Our performance results from recent DPACK testing showed that this DC would benefit from SSDs vs HDDs.

        That suggests that you are short on memory. Both AD itself and DNS should load into memory and never hit the disks except for at boot time. If the databases are staying on disk for reads, then memory is short.

        pchiodoP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller
          last edited by

          Doing the drive swap on a RAID 1 is not too bad since the "stress" will be all on the SSDs, which don't really stress. This isn't a parity array so not really stressing. And since the existing drives are healthy, a single drive copy is not a big deal. No worse than running a backup.

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

            @Dashrender said:

            For those that don't like this idea - do you also say the same thing about Drobo? They even recommend this process when you need to increase your storage with new drives.

            That's extremely different. Doing this like Paul wants to do on a RAID 1 going from Winchesters to SSDs is not a problem. Doing it on a Drobo is horrible. Drobo recommending that process is one of the things we point to as a major problem with their "recommending bad things to look good."

            It's no different than how they "recommend" mismatched drives. It kills the performance and lowers reliability. They act like allowing bad practices is a "feature" and ignore that every RAID device ever allowed the same things and it is only good practice that tells people not to do it. Drobo isn't a bad product, but their advice as to how to use their products is based around recommending reckless, crazy behaviour in order to make people who believe that black boxes are magic think that somehow a Drobo is not subject to the same stresses as other RAID arrays. Spoiler alert: it is.

            On a Drobo, doing a drive size increase with RAID 5 or RAID 6 is just terrible. I mean really, really terrible. If you have a B800i and wanted to move from 4TB to 6TB drives for example, you are breaking a RAID 6 array (at best, RAID 5 at worst) and doing a 24TB resilver.... eight times!! That's 192TB failure domain using SATA drives. You are looking at likely months of rebuilding, during which you are either on RAID 5 or RAID 0, under extreme stress with the box essentially offline during the process.

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

              @scottalanmiller Ditto Synology

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

                @MattSpeller said:

                @scottalanmiller Ditto Synology

                I don't think that they push it in the same way. They say that they can do it, but I've never seen them get all weird about pushing it as a reason to choose them.

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

                  @scottalanmiller They pimp their SHR raid-5 pretty hard. It and RAID-5 are the default comparison on their site, though you can change it.

                  0_1455041203047_upload-573010a7-70e6-4e55-bfb3-113379a607fc

                  https://www.synology.com/en-uk/support/RAID_calculator

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

                    SHR is fine, it's a virtualization layer on top of the RAID (well, below it technically) same as Drobo. That big is good. It's the pushing people to use mismatched drives, swap them to grow the system and such that Drobo does that is so bad.

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

                      @MattSpeller said:

                      @scottalanmiller They pimp their SHR raid-5 pretty hard. It and RAID-5 are the default comparison on their site, though you can change it.

                      0_1455041203047_upload-573010a7-70e6-4e55-bfb3-113379a607fc

                      https://www.synology.com/en-uk/support/RAID_calculator

                      What does @scottalanmiller always preach about taking advice from someone trying to sell you something?

                      DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • DashrenderD
                        Dashrender @travisdh1
                        last edited by

                        @travisdh1 said:

                        What does @scottalanmiller always preach about taking advice from someone trying to sell you something?

                        OK I'll take the hit on that one.

                        But I still think it's OK to do what the OP wanted as a way to move to SSDs.

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

                          @Dashrender said:

                          @travisdh1 said:

                          What does @scottalanmiller always preach about taking advice from someone trying to sell you something?

                          OK I'll take the hit on that one.

                          But I still think it's OK to do what the OP wanted as a way to move to SSDs.

                          Yes, Paul's way of doing it is really not a problem.

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

                            @scottalanmiller Interesting. It has 4GB at the moment. I certainly could up the memory pretty easily. I have a second DC, so I could just take it down, add more RAM and reboot in about 10 minutes. How much do you think?

                            Here's the stats:

                            Disk Throughput 12.00 MB/s Average IO size Read: 40.82 KB / Write: 24.63 KB
                            IOPS 4 at 95% Average Latency 5 ms Reads and 4 ms writes
                            Read/Write Ratio 86% / 14% Average Queue Depth 0.11
                            Total Local Capacity 68.00 GB Peak/Min CPU 10% / 0%
                            Free Local Capacity 36.00 GB (53%) Peak/Min Memory 2.49 GB / 0.91 GB
                            Used Local Capacity 32.00 GB (47%) Peak/Min Memory In Use 3.28 GB / 1.70 GB

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

                              @pchiodo Where is the IOPS number, I only see a 4. I think that it got cut off.

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

                                @scottalanmiller Here is a link to the stats - It's the total read latency that's raised this issue in the first place.

                                http://imgur.com/zTvAo9x

                                EDIT: So, if it's memory that's causing this in the first place, I should just be able to increase RAM, and not have to swap drives, correct?

                                scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • scottalanmillerS
                                  scottalanmiller @pchiodo
                                  last edited by

                                  @pchiodo said:

                                  @scottalanmiller Here is a link to the stats - It's the total read latency that's raised this issue in the first place.

                                  http://imgur.com/zTvAo9x

                                  You actually have an IOPS at 95th Percentile of.... 4. Not 4,000.... just 4. This is the lowest IOPS I've ever heard of. Literally.

                                  That latency is because your disks are likely spinning down and going to sleep.

                                  Typically you move to SSD because you have pushed your disks beyond the IOPS that they can do. That's not an issue here. Each drive can deliver 100 - 200 IOPS easily with disk cache pushing bursts much higher.

                                  Dont' go to SSD, it wouldn't do anything for that system. It's idle and running out of memory as it is. The disk latency might be "high", but it is never going to disk.

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

                                    @pchiodo said:

                                    EDIT: So, if it's memory that's causing this in the first place, I should just be able to increase RAM, and not have to swap drives, correct?

                                    Doesn't look like there is an issue there, either. You are never hitting the disks.

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

                                      @pchiodo said:

                                      @travisdh1 - We have a pretty heavy reliance on the DC, more notably the DNS due to some in house app dependencies. Our performance results from recent DPACK testing showed that this DC would benefit from SSDs vs HDDs.

                                      Are you feeling a lag in AD and DNS? What is pushing you to improve the performance of this system? The DPACK doesn't provide performance information, if provides capacity planning information only. The DPACK shows that the current system is underutilized, not taxed at all. The end users should be providing the feedback as to if the system is performing too slowly, are they complaining?

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

                                        @scottalanmiller We occasionally have issues on the shop floor with relatively slow response (4-5 seconds vs. sub-second) and when we track it down, it always points to name resolution as the hang-up. We have a shop floor app that uses hostnames, and seems to hit the DNS quite frequently. Like I said, on occasion, this will appear to slow down, and cause these intermittent lags.

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

                                          @pchiodo said:

                                          @scottalanmiller We occasionally have issues on the shop floor with relatively slow response (4-5 seconds vs. sub-second) and when we track it down, it always points to name resolution as the hang-up. We have a shop floor app that uses hostnames, and seems to hit the DNS quite frequently. Like I said, on occasion, this will appear to slow down, and cause these intermittent lags.

                                          DNS resolution of internal machines or DNS resolution of external domains? Even having 100,000 internal machines a DNS table should be in memory and essentially instant. If DNS is a delay, likely something is wrong that needs to be fixed, not that the system isn't fast enough.

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

                                            @scottalanmiller Well, I guess I will have to dig further. I don't have any glaring DNS errors, and everything else works fine. Might have to point at the programming people and dig through that. The DBMS, and the Application server for the Shop floor app run exceptionally well, and we have never had an issue with performance on those. But, I suppose this could be a client side issue.

                                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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