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All disks on Areca RAID card?

Jul 31, 2012 10:22 PM

When the PCIe 3.0 version of the Areca 1882ix raid controllers are released, I'm going to get one for a 4-6 drive raid 5 array for media and other files.  OK, this is a no brainer. But...

 

What about the other drives? My MOBO has two onboard raid controllers - Intel and Marvell.  Besides the raid 5 data drives, the system will have:

 

- 1 SSD system disk

- 2 WD Velocirapter disks in raid 0 for paging file and media cache

-1 WD Blue disk in a removable bay for archiving

 

Should these disks be on the Areca?  On the MOBO raid controllers? Advantages and disadvantages of each approach?

 

Thanks,

 

Dan.

 
Replies
  • Currently Being Moderated
    Aug 1, 2012 12:38 AM   in reply to Dan Clark

    Depends on the number of SATA3 connections you have. A number of motherboards have only two SATA3 connections on the mobo, plus two SATA3 connections on the Marvell chip. In that case I would leave the SSD on a mobo SATA3 port, the two Velociraptors on the Marvell SATA3 ports and the rest on the Areca. If you have 4 SATA3 ports on the mobo, you can consider to have the Velo's on the ICHR ports. The WD Blue can remain connected to any SATA port.

     
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    Aug 1, 2012 8:13 AM   in reply to Dan Clark

    Looks great.

     
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    Aug 1, 2012 9:12 AM   in reply to Harm Millaard

    Harm Millaard wrote:

     

    Depends on the number of SATA3 connections you have. A number of motherboards have only two SATA3 connections on the mobo, plus two SATA3 connections on the Marvell chip. In that case I would leave the SSD on a mobo SATA3 port, the two Velociraptors on the Marvell SATA3 ports and the rest on the Areca. If you have 4 SATA3 ports on the mobo, you can consider to have the Velo's on the ICHR ports. The WD Blue can remain connected to any SATA port.

    And not all Marvell SATA 3 controllers support RAID at all. For example, the Marvell SATA 3 controller on the Asus P8P67 Pro motherboard that's currently in my main system has no RAID support whatsoever. Only the native Intel SATA controller(s) on that motherboard support RAID at all.

     
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    Aug 1, 2012 2:51 PM   in reply to Harm Millaard

    Do you think that a single 600gb  WD Velocirapter would be fast enough for paging file and media cache. This would  be in conjuction with a 8 drive media raid

     

    Thanks

     

    Martin

     
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    Aug 1, 2012 3:58 PM   in reply to Martin Douglas

    Martin,

     

    While a single 600gb Vraptor may be "fast enough", I suspect that by simply adding the paging and media cache onto to your 8-drive RAID would perform even better. Just do some testing to help hone your final production setup. I used PPBM5 runs to evaluate various configurations. Don't forget that different media types and project workflows do have different priorities.

     

    Regards,

     

    Jim

     
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    Aug 1, 2012 7:12 PM   in reply to Dan Clark

    My apologies for the confusion, although my qestion was related to the discussion, it probably should have been a separate post.

     

    Martin

     
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    Aug 2, 2012 4:29 AM   in reply to Dan Clark

    Dan,

     

    A 2 x Vraptor 300GB RAID 0 array (600GB array) would be a great supplement to a 8x Areca based RAID 5 array. I would suggest using the RAID 0 for: paging file, media cache, media cache DB, and any render outputs. That will give you lots of speed, and if you were to loose your RAID 0 (they are indeed less reliable than a RAID 5 array, you really have not lost anything at all that is not completely recoverable).

     

    Regards,

     

    Jim

     
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    Aug 3, 2012 11:08 AM   in reply to Dan Clark

    I see you referring to this card as PCIe 3.0 but at least on this page below (if this is the one you're getting), it specifies that its 2.0 instead.  Not really sure what speed difference it really would make, but it piqued my curiosity. You should still be getting close to 1000MB/sec reads from your RAID 5, right?

     

    http://www.arecadirect.com/arpcin12.html

     
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