Karim Vaes

Why chop at leaves, when one must dig at roots
  • Home
  • About me
    • Curriculum Vitae
    • Services
    • Projects
  • Scripts
    • OWA Most Popular
  • Search
  • License
  • Contact

Raid Levels

The basics
RAID combines two or more physical hard disks into a single logical unit by using either special hardware or software. Hardware solutions often are designed to present themselves to the attached system as a single hard drive, and the operating system is unaware of the technical workings. Software solutions are typically implemented in the operating system, and again would present the RAID drive as a single drive to applications.

There are three key concepts in RAID: mirroring, the copying of data to more than one disk; striping, the splitting of data across more than one disk; and error correction, where redundant data is stored to allow problems to be detected and possibly fixed (known as fault tolerance). Different RAID levels use one or more of these techniques, depending on the system requirements. The main aims of using RAID are to improve reliability, important for protecting information that is critical to a business, for example a database of customer orders; or to improve speed, for example a system that delivers video on demand TV programs to many viewers.

The configuration affects reliability and performance in different ways. The problem with using more disks is that it is more likely that one will go wrong, but by using error checking the total system can be made more reliable by being able to survive and repair the failure. Basic mirroring can speed up reading data as a system can read different data from both the disks, but it may be slow for writing if the configuration requires that both disks must confirm that the data is correctly written. Striping is often used for performance, where it allows sequences of data to be read from multiple disks at the same time. Error checking typically will slow the system down as data needs to be read from several places and compared. The design of RAID systems is therefore a compromise and understanding the requirements of a system is important. Modern disk arrays typically provide the facility to select the appropriate RAID configuration. PC Format Magazine claims that “in all our real-world tests, the difference between the single drive performance and the dual-drive RAID 0 striped setup was virtually non-existent. And in fact, the single drive was ever-so-slightly faster than the other setups, including the RAID 5 system that we’d hoped would offer the perfect combination of performance and data redundancy”.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments
1 Comment »
Categories
High Availability, Infrastructure, Performance, Storage
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 2.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

OpenSource Storage Management

I came across OpenFiler a while ago and was intriged by it. Now I’ve taken the liberty to testing it in my lab, and I must say that I’m impressed by the features. It’s something every sysadmin should check out to see if it isn’t a viable solution for their overpriced storage solution… ;-)

.

Openfiler is a powerful, intuitive browser-based network storage software distribution. Openfiler delivers file-based Network Attached Storage and block-based Storage Area Networking in a single framework. Its uses the rPath Linux metadistribution and is distributed as a stand-alone Linux distribution. The entire software stack interfaces with third-party software that is all open source.

File-based networking protocols supported by Openfiler include: NFS, SMB/CIFS, HTTP/WebDAV and FTP. Network directories supported by Openfiler include NIS, LDAP (with support for SMB/CIFS encrypted passwords), Active Directory (in native and mixed modes) and Hesiod. Authentication protocols include Kerberos 5.

Openfiler includes support for volume-based partitioning, iSCSI (target and initiator), scheduled snapshots, resource quota, and a single unified interface for share management which makes allocating shares for various network file-system protocols a breeze.

Comments
No Comments »
Categories
High Availability, Infrastructure, Interesting, Management, OpenSource, Performance, Storage, Tech, Tip, Unix/Linux
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 4.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Scrum & XP from the Trenches

Henrik Kniberg and InfoQ.com offer a free version for download of the book “Scrum & XP from the Trenches“.

This book includes:

  • Practical tips and tricks for most Scrum and XP practices
  • Typical pitfalls and how they were addressed
  • Diagrams and photos illustrating day-to-day work
  • Testing and test-driven development
  • Scaling and coordinating multiple teams
  • Dealing with resistance from inside and outside the team
  • Planning and time estimation techniques
  • Forwards by Jeff Sutherland and Mike Cohn

I’ve enjoyed reading the book and must say that I can recommended it to anyone interested in Scrum!

Comments
No Comments »
Categories
Agile, Book, Collaboration, Management, Project, Scrum
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (2 votes, average: 3.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

The Road from Project Manager to Agile Coach

Source by Lyssa

Comments
No Comments »
Categories
PM, Project, Vids
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 5.00 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Recent Posts

  • Why IT shouldn’t be run as a business…
  • Sushi Etiquette
  • Wage cut or wage freeze?
  • Basic business money making concepts
  • Quote of the day

Similar Posts

  • Disk Investigator
  • Solaris: Swap Space and the TMPFS File System
  • Which is the greenest; disks or flash?
  • Tuning Disks I/O for best performance
  • TrueCrypt secures your information

Recent Comments

  • BloggerGeeze on Wordpress widget : Most popular posts
  • linux-blog - Fa. anracon - Dr. Mönchmeyer » Blog Archive » Dell M90, Suse 11.2, KDE 4.4, VMware - Teil II on Running your dual boot windows inside Vmware Server within Ubuntu
  • Khalid Inayatullah on Raid Levels
  • Söve on Disabling the openoffice splash screen in ubuntu
  • alidhaey on BigIP LTM : configuring & testing the snmp destinations

Commercial

Categories

2.0 Ads Agile Bash Blogroll Book Brain Business Career Change CIO Collaboration Communication Corner Creative CRM Culture Desktop Development Dreambox Drupal Education Entrepreneur F5 Firefox Food Freelance Fun General Green Growth High Availability Human Resources Idea Infrastructure Insightful Interesting IT Java Lesson License Life Malware Management Mind Model MythTV Network NLP OpenSource Performance PHP PM Presentation Project Quote Remote Scrum Security SEO Social Spam Storage Stress Tactical Team Tech TED Time Management Tip Tool TV Ubuntu Unix/Linux Vids Vim Virtual VmWare Voip Web Wordpress

Archives

  • January 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • June 2009
  • April 2009
  • March 2009
  • February 2009
  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • November 2008
  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
rss Comments rss valid xhtml 1.1 design by jide licensed as Creative Commons Attribution