jang430 Posted July 4, 2020 Share Posted July 4, 2020 Currently, I use an nvme as cache, and at the same time, used for VM. I was reading another Forum, and it was saying for Gigabit network, a SAS 10k rpm drive would be fast enough to read/ write without causing bottleneck. Is this correct? Will my 7200 rpm drive, H7230AS60SUN3.0T - Sun 3TB 7200RPM SAS 6GB/s 64MB Cache Hot-Pluggable 3.5-inch Hard Drive, be enough to do the same? Assuming it is plugged into a Dell perc h310. I believe it uses LSI SAS 2008. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Quote Link to comment
JorgeB Posted July 4, 2020 Share Posted July 4, 2020 Any relatively modern disk should be able read/write at more than gigabit line speed (for large files), except very close to the inner sectors for some slower models, you can use the diskspeed docker to have an idea of your disks performance. Quote Link to comment
jang430 Posted July 5, 2020 Author Share Posted July 5, 2020 So a single spinner alone will have been suffice for cache drive, not even SAS is required? Any drive that can perform better than 125 MBps would be ok to assign as Cache drive? Quote Link to comment
JorgeB Posted July 5, 2020 Share Posted July 5, 2020 3 hours ago, jang430 said: Any drive that can perform better than 125 MBps would be ok to assign as Cache drive? Yes, if you transfer mostly large files, like media files. Quote Link to comment
jang430 Posted July 5, 2020 Author Share Posted July 5, 2020 Great! Will have to think how to reposition all my drives once again 🙂 Looks like I will be assigning an SSD to my VM permanently, and an HDD to my cache drive. Add to that, I'll be replacing all my drives to SAS 3 TB. Looks like a huge task ahead for me. But to have an HDD as cache, and VM to unassigned disk may be something I should have done way earlier. Quote Link to comment
jang430 Posted July 17, 2020 Author Share Posted July 17, 2020 On 7/5/2020 at 3:28 PM, johnnie.black said: Yes, if you transfer mostly large files, like media files. Was reading through this again. @johnnie.black Does it mean if a lot of small files, drop in performance from SSD to Spinner will be significant? Quote Link to comment
JorgeB Posted July 17, 2020 Share Posted July 17, 2020 Copying smaller files is always slower, even from SSD to SSD, but spinners will be even slower. Quote Link to comment
jang430 Posted July 17, 2020 Author Share Posted July 17, 2020 OK, thank you for the reply. Quote Link to comment
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