You are exactly correct. I'm using the Supertrak EX16350. Sorry for not including more in my first post...woops. But you're right on.
30 Megabytes per second (I meant to say) on multiple computers simultaneously, indicating 60 MB/second + read rates.
With SATA II drives, this thing should be smoking fast
That's what I was thinking!
How much difference do you think SATA II makes? The card is reporting SATA II on all drives and I definitely believe that to be true. The new drives I bought were definitely SATA II and the older ones I was almost positive that they were.
For cache settings, each drive has a "Write Cache Enabled" setting and an "NCQ Enabled" setting. I have both set to enabled on all drives.
Here's some information on the Logical Drive, consisting of 16 500GB drives in RAID6 configuration.
Assigned Name Logical Drive 1
RAID Level RAID 6
Sector Size 512 Bytes
Stripe Size 64 KB
Parity Count 2
Capacity 6999.99 GB
Status Functional
Background Activity Idle
It's currently set to Write Through, which is slower but more secure. Write Back adds the cache I guess. I don't have the BBU but I do have a UPS on the server.
I'm confused about the drive cache and the card cache. Is the card cache even used with the safer mode? With both caches, that's 512MB total cache because each drive has 16MB.
It failed drive 16 two days ago and I replaced it (successful rebuild) but now I'm using the same drive in an external enclosure and it formatted fine and is holding data right now (450GB--almost full).
The server array is:
3.96 TB used
2.39 TB free
6.36 TB capacity
[62% full]
Back to the smokin fast assumption. I would really think so, too. Are there any other free speed test programs I could run? Part of me just wants a number so I can know that it is performing as it should. At one point I was getting 200 MB/sec duplication speed (read/write same logical drive). If each drive is capable of 45MB/sec sustained transfer rate (a reasonable average), that would mean 630 MB/sec absolute max speed (this doesn't include the two parity drives). So maybe I could hope for 500 MB/sec? I really don't have any source or destinations capable of anything close to this so it's not a huge deal but it would be nice to know what it's capable of.
The biggest problem is that gigabit networking is the main hookup ... which is fast but can't compete with what this array should be producing. Also, I'm usually reading or writing a single disk drive as I'm moving data around so the limiting factor is my single drive. But, I should be able to get full speed access on multiple computers.
What is above gigabit ethernet? If I buy a gigabit switch, what's the least expensive way to connect the server to the switch so the switch can be delivered more speed and then it would condense down to gigabit per computer? What about 10Gbit to the switch? I am absolutely not needing this but it would be interesting to learn more about what's next. Or what about dual Gigabit connections? Gigabit is about 125 MB MAX so 250 would be much closer to what I would say is a 500 MB max. 10GBit would be a gigabyte per second+...wow.
Addition: For errors in the logs...yes, I'm having some errors. It is always Disk 4 and it says there is a bad sector (BSL) but it seems like it finds the BSL but then immediately clears it. I see it during a Fix (Synchronization) and randomly. Perhaps it's a specific section of the disk. I've thought about taking Disk 16 that failed a few days ago (but is working fine externally) and putting it in instead of Disk 4 or simply buying a new disk. I get sick of reading the error (and getting about 4 emails whenever it encounters it) but also it is probably an initial sign of failure.
It does bother me that drive 16 failed even though it's working fine now! Any thoughts on this?
2nd Addition: The My Book's (Essential) that 10 of the drives came out of are, surprisingly enough, the WD RE2 series drives. So apparently, WD puts their higher end drive (or put--haven't tried a My Book recently) in their external enclosure. This is one of the drives that failed. I think I had SMART disabled when the drive failed but I turned it back on for no defined reason.