I received lots of replys and will include them here since it's easier. From the replys I got, there are quite a few people using the Xserve RAID with SUN and it seems to be working well. Begin responses................. Xserve RAID is cheaper than Sun storage because they are made using ATA drives instead of SCSI. It's like comparing apples to oranges really. I don't know of anyone using Xserve RAID on a Sun, but I'd beware. On their site they tout the compatibility, but this storage is certified for Windows, various Linux flavors, Novell, but no mention of Solaris. Personally I wouldn't let this define my choice of OS for NFS server since I feel that Solaris beats Linux for NFS hands down (I'm talking about reliability...I've found that Linux NFS actually performs a bit better in the few comparisons I've done). My personal recommendation would be Nexsan, we're using two ATAboy2 systems and are very happy with them. 2.6TB usable space on each, with a very nice web-based interface. We have had exceptional experience with Nexsan support. You're welcome over if you'd like to see the interface. Nexsan has some new models that look very nice, in a denser format. Dave Foster http://www.dothill.com/ 3310/3510/3511 Sun OEMs from them with SUn's own firmware. Fujitsu Siemens S30 Pure fast JBOD, 14 disks Ultra320 (personal experience - fast!!) Make sure to use Ultra320 controller E It works. Last year, I was on a contract with the US Dept. of Health and Human Serivces. Among our primary responsiblities was the administration of a Web portal system that was composed of 15 or so Sun Fire servers using Xserves to RAID their databases. Completely compatible with NFS. Boot order is important... that's the one thing that tripped us up. If I recall correctly, if you reboot your Sun systems, or if one of them crashes... reboot the Xserves too. Beyond that, I don't remember much else. Like I said, it worked. --Greg Chavez We have 5 XServe/RAID arrays currently all connected to a x86 servers running Debian Linux. However, before we purchased the first unit, Apple kindly loaned us an array, FC PCI adapter and gave us access to an engineer so we could do our own tests. We successfully tested this on Linux, Solaris 9 and FreeBSD 5.x. For Solaris, all that was required was to download the appropriate driver from the LSI logic website. We purchase the FC cards from Apple as they are cheaper and come with the copper interconnect cables which save you some money over purchasing fibre transceivers etc. The copper ones are fine of you have the array and servers in the save rack. Apple don't currently change the PROMs on the FC cards so they are standard LSI logic ones. One point to remember (which you probably know), is that the RAID array is effectively two independent arrays, each with up to 7 drives. If you run these as RAID5 (like we do) you have one drive out of 7 used for parity. Hope this helps. Kind regards, Shaun. I've fired up a XserveRaid on a Sun machine (v240 sol9) no problems.. jsut showed up as a big disk.. well, it was 2 big disks, because Xserveraid is 2 7 disk raids, not a single 14 disk.. no controller fault tollerance. I've had some luck with Arena boxes attached with SCSI to our servers, but you're not getting realy good performance out of them. I'd take a look at the 3511s from Sun, that's what I'm running now, and they fly, and decent price. -- Paul Greidanus See Ben Rockwood's blog (http://www.cuddletech.com/blog). He did a three-part review of the Xserve RAID back in March or April. -- Coy Hile Promise manufactures SATA to SCSI storage that might fit the bill. Also, RiadZone and ATABeast are worth looking into. Yes, I've worked in the field both at Sun and then later Apple... worked with customers who wanted to do just that. It works just fine, though you will want to be running a Sun kernel that can address the loads of space you can get from a loaded-up Xserve RAID. Xserve RAID just looks like plain old fiber channel storage - nothing too fancy there. For the most part (modulo niggling details like the max LUN size issues mentioned), it's pretty straightforward. KR We've got several XServ RAID arrays hooked up to various Sun systems (V880, SF280). Works like a charm. We use the Apple HBA's along with the Sun drivers from LSI Logic. One thing to keep in mind is that Apple markets these things primarily for video storage/editing and therefore they are optimized for sequential I/O. While they can and do support database type operation, I don't think they would do very well in a heavily used environment of this type. However, they are prefect for development work and even for things like standby databases. Also, although they have two controllers, they are NOT redundant. Each controller only has access to the drives on its side of the array. I'd be happy to try to answer any other questions you might have. Best Regards, Charlie Take a look at: Infortrend or NexSan or Synetic or ACNC products (if you look for Sata storage). GB Rage computers, near me, quoted me a rather attractive rack-mount solution that, IIRC, would meet those requirements. "Near me" means S.E. Michigan. Regards, Jim We have three (or four? I telecommute and loose track of machine room inventory) Xserve RAIDs and a Sun 3511FC with 42 disks (four chassis). There are some controller and FC path redundancies in the 3511FC that the Xserve raid doesn't have but the bottom line: the 3511FC has been a major headache to setup and manage compared to the Xserve RAID. The extra FC path redundancy in the 3511FC are mostly necessary to compensate for the disk scattered over a bunch of separate boxes and the cabling gets really complicated really fast. Also note that the 3511FC (and some other Sun storage) is just a re-badged Dot-Hill Systems RAID. The same hardware is available under assorted different brands. Even if they were the same price, I'd pick the Xserve RAID and they are VERY FAR from being the same price. It is handy to have a Mac manage the Xserve RAID, but it isn't strictly necessary. The Raid Admin application is pure Java...just grab the jar file out of the application bundle and run where ever you want. (Well, I've never tried it on Windows...) We have been using them with the Apple branded FC card in Sun 280R, V480 and V490. It didn't with the built-in FC on the 280R. I don't think we ever tried on-board FC on the 480/490. -john We use Xserve RAIDs with our V20z servers and it works fine. We even use generic Qlogic fc cards rather than the Sun ones. This is with Solaris 10. It's been working great so far after about 5 months of operation! We also use the Qlogic SANbox 5200 switches that Apple resells (Sun resells those too, but for a much higher price) /dale you may look at the Fujitsu Siemens S80, fiber channel JBOD, 2 controllers, 512M cache. expandable to 56 disks. Supported on Solaris running on Fujitsu PrimePowers, Linux and Windows. http://www.fujitsu-siemens.com/products/storage/disk_systems/entry/fibrecat_ s80.html We have had a Xserve RAID on a Sun SPARC box for a couple of years and yes it does work and it is much cheaper.. - Check out the site: http://alienraid.org - The page we used: http://alienraid.org/article.php?story=20030829123109307 If you have a specific question then please contact me. Andrew We are using one connected to a Sun 280R. It's serving files for our RealMedia Streaming service. It works, but you need to consider your needs. It's not in the same class of storage as EMC, Hitachi, etc. If you're using it as a tier 2/mid-range/workgroup (whatever you call it) service I think they're OK. Below is my original question: Was wondering if anyone has hooked up an Apple Xserve RAID to a SUN box and if so does it work and how well? The Apple Xserve RAID is a LOT cheaper than SUN storage. Also if anyone can recommend any other non-SUN storage to use that would be great. Looking for somethin that can hold at least 12 disks with room to grow via expansion units or additional unused slots. Price needs to be under 15k. Thanks. Dave Martini LLNL _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Mon Nov 7 19:31:14 2005
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