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ZFS versus RAID: Eight Ironwolf disks, two filesystems, one winner

37 pointsby sharjeelsayedalmost 5 years ago

1 comment

kyuudoualmost 5 years ago
First paragraph of conclusion:<p>&quot;If you&#x27;re looking for raw, unbridled performance it&#x27;s hard to argue against a properly-tuned pool of ZFS mirrors. RAID10 is the fastest per-disk conventional RAID topology in all metrics, and ZFS mirrors beat it resoundingly—sometimes by an order of magnitude—in every category tested, with the sole exception of 4KiB uncached reads.&quot;<p>However, test rig is using rusty spindles and is generally very low-fi. There&#x27;s no hardware RAID controller and only SAS 6G 7200rpm 12TB Seawolfs are used. I&#x27;d hardly call this a relevant test of ZFS vs. every other RAID in that sense. A comparison rig with a RAID controller and some tiered storage with DRAM cache etc would be a little more fair.<p>The other big issue IMO is that every scenario one would consider high-performance storage (cloud architecture, HPC, specialized heavy write DB apps, to name a few), Linux is probably running with an app stack heavily invested in some distro of it, which does not have native drivers for it (ZFS) due to Oracle&#x27;s inherited licensing from Sun which is not GPL.<p>FreeBSD is the next obvious choice since its ZFS implementation supposedly kicks ass but there are significant development and architecture issues there.<p>Doing storage (or any) performance metrics is kind of a black art and this is like a cute dalliance with some SOHO stack you&#x27;d find at your mom&#x27;s local accounting firm.<p>Still, I love ZFS and the BSDs but I think this article... well, sucks.
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