Leo Bicknell wrote:
But what's really missing is storage management. RAID5 (and similar) require all drives to be online all the time. I'd love an intelligent file system that could spin down drives when not in use, and even for many workloads spin up only a portion of the drives. It's easy to imagine a system with a small SSD and a pair of disks. Reads spin one disk. Writes go to that disk and the SSD until there are enough, which spins up the second drive and writes them out as a proper mirror. In a home file server drive motors, time you have 4-6 drives, eat most of the power. CPU's speed step down nicely, drives don't.
Late reply by me, but excellent points. A combination of mdadm and hdparm on linux should suffice to have a raid that will spin down the disks when not in use. I have used for years a G4 system with a mdadm raid1 (and a separate boot disk) and hdparm configured to spin the raid disks down after 10 minutes and it worked great. I think in a raid10 this would only spin up the disk pair that has the data you need, but leave the rest asleep. But I didn't try that yet. What I'd like is to have small disk enclosuer that includes a whole (low power) computer capable of having linux installed on some flash memory. Say you have an enclosure with space for 4 2.5 inch disks, install linux, set it up as a raid10, connect through USB to your computer for back up purposes. Greetings, Jeroen -- Earthquake Magnitude: 3.0 Date: Friday, April 13, 2012 17:45:06 UTC Location: Central Alaska Latitude: 64.0464; Longitude: -148.9850 Depth: 1.80 km