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j3rkstore posted:Is there any downside to buying off-lease NetApp shelves on ebay? Some of the retailers have warranty options so I'd be looking at those. It depends on what you plan on storing on them. If it's just your warez collection, go for it! If it's a snapmirror/snapvault secondary for corporate windows workgroup data, I'd say you're probably ok as well. If it's your CRM or corporate email, I'd say it's a bad idea. You'll be protected from low level disk errors provided you keep enough spares around for the aggregates.
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# ? Feb 11, 2012 19:52 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 08:17 |
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evil_bunnY posted:Where do you intend to get replacement drives? I've seen next-business-day from multiple retailers for products under warranty, with the option to extend to 3 years. on a SAN, maybe when I win MegaMillions?
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# ? Feb 11, 2012 20:15 |
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bort posted:e: /\ /\ /\ that sounds to me like your monitoring software needs a MIB with the vendor-specific info. You have that already? Yeah, I'm hitting the OIDs directly using snmpget/snmpwalk and getting nothing.
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# ? Feb 11, 2012 22:37 |
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j3rkstore posted:on a SAN, maybe when I win MegaMillions? evil_bunnY fucked around with this message at 23:40 on Feb 11, 2012 |
# ? Feb 11, 2012 23:29 |
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I could have had a rhombically bent AX4.
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# ? Feb 12, 2012 05:05 |
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evil_bunnY posted:I have 2 MD1000's at home, and I regret nothing. I absolutely do not store any warez on my FAS3210 with PAMII at home. None at all. The DS4243 attached to it is totally work related.
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# ? Feb 12, 2012 16:07 |
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You have 220V in your house? Do you have to keep that rig air conditioned? That's a half ton right there.
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# ? Feb 12, 2012 17:22 |
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bort posted:You have 220V in your house? My shelves are in a sound proof cabinet with a pair of outside ducts. bort posted:I could have had a rhombically bent AX4. evil_bunnY fucked around with this message at 18:37 on Feb 12, 2012 |
# ? Feb 12, 2012 18:02 |
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evil_bunnY posted:Accidental dropkick? evil_bunnY posted:Some of us live in civilized countries.
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# ? Feb 12, 2012 21:31 |
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bort posted:You have 220V in your house? Most power supplies will autorange from 90 to 250, so you can hook them up to 240V single phase. Just have to find yourself a NEMA 6-15P/6-20P to C13 cord.
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# ? Feb 13, 2012 03:12 |
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bort posted:You have 220V in your house? 240V... Small split system keeps it cool, enough. Definitely no autosupports going out of her thats for sure.
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# ? Feb 13, 2012 03:52 |
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Doing a new SMB Vmware deployment, thinking that the Netapp FAS2240-2 looks like my best bet in this space. Any other opinions on this? We will have: 4-6 physical hosts running about 50 VM's, not heavy IO. ~1.5TB non-deduped One physical database cluster SQL08, heavy-ish IO. 2TB currently Dedupe is the only fancy feature I'm really interested in. Reliability of the unit is paramount. Price point I'm looking at is low-end san territory, $20k or so to start plus reasonable expansion costs. EMC VNXe, dedupe appears not as good and this thread basically turned into a poo poo on EMC support factory, so that's a turnoff. Equallogic didn't seem particularly compelling, no 10g/8g FC options in this price range. NFS still seems to be nicest way to present deduped volumes to vmware, but I guess vaai is going to change this, so not be as much of an issue if the arrays supports that. Can't think of a compelling reason for iscsi/nfs besides that. Assuming I could direct connect my database pair via the netapp's 4 x SAS ports, or are those reserved for disk shelf expansions? Also, don't currently work with any Netapp resellers. Is it worth finding one or just go right to netapp, who's going to have better pricing?
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 19:06 |
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Oh Openfiler has Dedupe and DRBD? So long freenas
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 21:26 |
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I'm trying to figure out a list of SAN vendors to look at. So far we've looked at: Compellent Sun IBM Others I can think of: Netapp HP Lefthand EMC Equalogic 3par (gently caress, also owned by HP?) Are any of those not making products anymore? Any other companies I should try and look at?
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 21:32 |
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Yes thats a super open ended question. Whats your budget/feature requirements/etc/etc/etc
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 21:55 |
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What Syano said. But if your requirements match what they can provide, and you don't have a dedicated storage admin, I wouldn't sell Equallogic short.
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 22:01 |
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Internet Explorer posted:I wouldn't sell Equallogic short. This, for clients want a VM setup I usually just go get a Equallogic setup as it is really easy to install, maintain, and provides a decent value.
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 22:08 |
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FISHMANPET posted:I'm trying to figure out a list of SAN vendors to look at. As Syano said, it's a bit like simply asking "what car should I look at?" without knowing if you want 7 seats and have fat kids or you want a sports coupe...
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 22:09 |
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Interestingly, it appears that the iSCSI initiator in Server 2008 R2 is much faster than in Server 2003...we upgraded a box that was connected to our Netapp via 10Gbe and measured throughput jumped from 100MB/sec to 400MB/sec. Has anyone else noticed this?
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 22:18 |
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Well I was hoping for just a list of major manufacturers. We're looking at getting an all encompassing SAN to hold our VM infrastructure and user data. We really like compellent for the automatic tiering, because it fits well our data. We're a university department, and professors will buy blocks of space for themselves, and then never touch it, so we like that it will migrate down to the lowest tier on its own. And also that our VMs would migrate to the top on their own, and lots of home directory data would live somewhere in between. We'll hopefully be fully virtualized as well, which everything will live in VMDK files. I think our budget is $100k, but I'm really not sure on that. A lot depends on if its good enough to get people to buy in, so the budget is kind of an open ended question. If anybody makes anything that compares with the automatic tiering and block level RAID of compellent I'm all ears.
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 22:26 |
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Get that EMC Storage book I posted in the other thread it will really help you make a clearer decision.
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 22:43 |
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Corvettefisher posted:Get that EMC Storage book I posted in the other thread it will really help you make a clearer decision. Yeah, I emailed my boss, if he doesn't get back to me I'll just order them myself. It can come out of my tax refund, since that's going into my VCP fund anyway.
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 22:45 |
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Nukelear v.2 posted:Doing a new SMB Vmware deployment, thinking that the Netapp FAS2240-2 looks like my best bet in this space. Any other opinions on this? Look at Nimble, it's a bit over your price range, but I'm pushing about 50% block level dedupe (They keep referring to it as compression which it technically isn't) on my SQL db's and my VMFS operating systems datastore is barely using any of the space I allocated it: to the point where I'm about to create a new datastore, migrate and reclaim some storage. I've just started working with this thing and compared to the frustrations of EMC and Unisphere I'm having a blast.
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 22:46 |
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Rhymenoserous posted:Look at Nimble, it's a bit over your price range, but I'm pushing about 50% block level dedupe (They keep referring to it as compression which it technically isn't) on my SQL db's and my VMFS operating systems datastore is barely using any of the space I allocated it: to the point where I'm about to create a new datastore, migrate and reclaim some storage. I would never use Nimble given how small and new they are. We looked at them in the past because one of their reps is a personal friend of one of the managers here, and they have such a small user-base and team. Just my personal opinion.
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 22:50 |
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Rhymenoserous posted:Look at Nimble, it's a bit over your price range, but I'm pushing about 50% block level dedupe (They keep referring to it as compression which it technically isn't) on my SQL db's and my VMFS operating systems datastore is barely using any of the space I allocated it: to the point where I'm about to create a new datastore, migrate and reclaim some storage. Thanks for the tip, have never heard of these guys but it looks good on paper. Just the usual concerns with not using a main tier vendor, support, training etc. These are fixed units with no expansion trays? I would be surprised to get any dedupe on my db's, where we do have similar db data we use SQL08's compression and it's fabulous. Mostly looking at that feature for my VM's because as you've pointed out I could turn my 2TB of VM storage into like 100G since they all run the same Win2k8 or Ubuntu distro with very little custom data.
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# ? Feb 14, 2012 22:55 |
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three posted:I would never use Nimble given how small and new they are. We looked at them in the past because one of their reps is a personal friend of one of the managers here, and they have such a small user-base and team. Just my personal opinion. Nimble is comprised of ex-NetApp folks, so they are attempting to play in roughly the same space by doing something like "NetApp, but better". I have no idea if the product is compelling or not, but given that they only started in 2009 I'd be wary of putting anything enterprise class on their gear until they have some sort of track record and some valid references. Nukelear v.2 posted:I would be surprised to get any dedupe on my db's, where we do have similar db data we use SQL08's compression and it's fabulous. Mostly looking at that feature for my VM's because as you've pointed out I could turn my 2TB of VM storage into like 100G since they all run the same Win2k8 or Ubuntu distro with very little custom data. Compression and dedupe work in different and sometimes complementary ways. Compression works on blocks or contiguous segments of blocks, while dedupe works across all blocks in the volume. So compression may shrink a segment of 4 distinct blocks into two distinct blocks, while dedupe might then see that those two distinct blocks also exist elsewhere on the volume and replace them with pointers. Depending on the type of data you can easily see benefits from both. And obviously if you're running multiple SQL instances compression doesn't work across those, but dedupe will (depending on the SAN layout).
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# ? Feb 15, 2012 05:16 |
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For fucks sake EMC. I've had this one unit showing drive 0 failed for two weeks now. Everyday they call me and ask me to send SPCollects (log files), which I inform them over and over again that I can't do, it errors out. But every day they ask the same thing. They send a tech out, he looks at it, says he can't talk to it, does nothing, and bounces me back to web support, who again does the same song and dance. EDIT: What the gently caress? These things run Windows XP Embedded? Serfer fucked around with this message at 00:20 on Feb 16, 2012 |
# ? Feb 15, 2012 23:34 |
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The Something Awful Forums > Discussion > Serious Hardware / Software Crap > Enterprise Storage Megathread: For fucks sake EMC.
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# ? Feb 15, 2012 23:39 |
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Serfer posted:What the gently caress? These things run Windows XP Embedded? Clariion right? Aside from the horrible installation support from EMC, I was always amused with the mishmash of hardware and software on their stuff. Their control station was an Intel ISP1100 running some old version of Redhat (7 I think). Nothing was more frustrating than being at work for 32+ hours while their techs *RACK* the system. They were opening everything one at a time, reading all the manuals FOR THE RAILS, then phoning home ASKING FOR MORE SUPPORT. Wouldn't give me a chance to do it as they wouldn't approve it. When they were finally finished with racking and cabling (another 36 hour day), we were left with a disgustingly messy installation. Co-worker and I re-racked/re-cabled it in a 4 hour maintenance window a few years later when we had to move it because the facility built out our racks improperly (perpendicular to a hot/cold aisle).
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 01:14 |
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Welp, I think I can cross EMC off of my list.
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 03:25 |
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I've had great experiences with the EMC techs that have come onsite to relocate arrays/add disk trays etc. They were nice friendly guys, knew their poo poo, kept everything neat and worked quickly. I suppose it varies from region to region though. Phone support is a different story altogether
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 03:42 |
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If there's even a hint of bad support that's a serious deal breaker for us, since we've had some pretty bad support with existing Sun stuff.
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 04:05 |
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GrandMaster posted:I've had great experiences with the EMC techs that have come onsite to relocate arrays/add disk trays etc. They were nice friendly guys, knew their poo poo, kept everything neat and worked quickly. I suppose it varies from region to region though. In EMC's defense, it was only the initial install guys that were garbage. We had some great techs come after the install to assist with new shelf installations, flare upgrades, etc. However, they should be sending top guys to make sure the system gets up and running and is installed properly and professionally. First impressions are the most important. Wasting 60+ hours of the client's time for a simple installation should never happen.
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 04:12 |
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If your budget provides for it, I honestly wouldn't consider anything other than netapp.
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 04:36 |
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Was it even EMC techs? In my experience, almost every storage vendor will send their resellers to do the initial install. This was the case when Isilon (EMC) did an install for me last week, in fact.
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 06:34 |
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adorai posted:If your budget provides for it, I honestly wouldn't consider anything other than netapp.
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 08:12 |
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spoon daddy posted:(17 62xx clusters)
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 10:07 |
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spoon daddy posted:truth that. We needed the oomph of top tier netapps (17 62xx clusters) and had the $$$. How much did that cost?!
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 16:04 |
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feld posted:
More importantly, are you hiring??? I would love to just hold my body against that rack.
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 17:17 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 08:17 |
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spoon daddy posted:(17 62xx clusters) I wanna work there.
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# ? Feb 16, 2012 17:36 |