Its's not better for ZFS, its better for uptime.
Usually all important data are on a datapools, not on syspool,
so a reinstall to a new disk, if you have a hd crash, is not a problem.
Gea
Uptime ? What do you mean ?
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Its's not better for ZFS, its better for uptime.
Usually all important data are on a datapools, not on syspool,
so a reinstall to a new disk, if you have a hd crash, is not a problem.
Gea
Very interesting, omniscence!
However, i wonder about current chipset payload size, if AMD and other chipsets support 512-bytes but Intel limits at 64-bytes then this may explain difference in PCI-express performance between such chipset platforms.
I may be able to test this, by using a SuperMicro USAS-L8i controller with some SSDs in RAID0 and test throughput when the controller is connected to PCI-express 1.0 x1 slot. I can't test this easily on Intel chipset, though.
And perhaps the current generation Sandy Bridge chipsets have improvements in this area?
Thank you Gea for your quick reply, I appreciate
I think to stand on RaidZ because of space and it's fast enough...
Can I read temperatures of HDD in Napp-it ?
And what about power economy of HDD (spin-off) ?
My roommate did WHS as a guest under esxi and was not terribly thrilled with it. He also tried FreeNAS under esxi and wasn't happy there either. Eventually he just made a seperate physical SAN via iscsi with bonded gigabit. Food for thought.