Best way to create a large data space
John Nielsen
lists at jnielsen.net
Fri Jul 14 14:37:23 UTC 2006
On Thursday 13 July 2006 20:24, stan wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 13, 2006 at 04:20:56PM -0400, John Nielsen wrote:
> > On Thursday 13 July 2006 08:34, stan wrote:
> > > i have a Sun Ultra 40 with 4 500F SATA drives. I plan on using this
> > > machine primarily for a large data storage requirement.
> > >
> > > What I want is one large /data partition. Given all the choices for
> > > doing this in FreeBSD (software) what's the "best" choice here? The
> > > partio will be shared via SAMBA if that affects the thhinking here.
> >
> > "Best" really depends on what your needs and goals are. Here's a quick
> > overview of what the choices ARE, based mostly on memory. Corrections and
> > additions welcome. I'll try to make some notes about pros and cons as
> > well.
>
> Thanks for the nice summary.
>
> The data will be backed up nightly, so I'll probably use gstirpe to get the
> maximum capicty. RAID5 would not work very well with 3 x 500G (asuuming
> that I can't use the 500G that I put the system on).
If that's really what you want to do then here are a couple more tips. You
can't boot from a gstripe volume, and when (not if) one of your drives goes
bad you'll be happier if you only lose your data and not your entire OS. So
plan to partition the drives and use gmirror for the base OS (since you can
boot from a gmirror volume). Make a relatively small partition (10GB?) at the
beginning of each drive. Make a gmirror volume using two or three of them and
install the OS to that volume. Use the remaining one or two small partitions
for swap or utility partitions. Then make your giant gstripe volume out of
the large partitions on all four drives.
JN
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