Brilliant work!For those on here: Simple MTTDL RAID Reliability Calculator - Beta. Would love feedback.
RAID-Z and RAIDZ-2 are notably absent though, they would be really useful to have
Thanks
Dave
Brilliant work!For those on here: Simple MTTDL RAID Reliability Calculator - Beta. Would love feedback.
Sorry for the necro, but the link on the calculator to the proper forum page doesn't go anywhere. The issue of "Other" displaying no data still exists.When "other" is selected for MTBF the calculated data seems to go to a strange default which is insensitive to whatever is entered into the "Enter # for MTBF (base 10): " box
I think we just fixed the <3 disk issue and the Other should be working now. Let me know if it does not.Sorry for the necro, but the link on the calculator to the proper forum page doesn't go anywhere. The issue of "Other" displaying no data still exists.
Hmm, perhaps I'm just not using it or understanding it right. If I switch it to Other, and put any number in for my MTBF the results are always the same in the chart below.I think we just fixed the <3 disk issue and the Other should be working now. Let me know if it does not.
Forum page I should be able to fix tomorrow morning.
I agree.Brilliant work!
RAID-Z and RAIDZ-2 are notably absent though, they would be really useful to have
Thanks
Dave
As far as I know there is no difference that’s correct. At least that’s what I have always used, maybe I have been wrong.Raid-z = raid 5
Raid-z2 = raid 6
Or did I miss something about the zfs implementations?
Clearly you did.Raid-z = raid 5
Raid-z2 = raid 6
Or did I miss something about the zfs implementations?
You appear to be confusing 'reasonable' with 'practical'.If you are thinking 430B hours on a RAID-Z2 6x 4TB array is a reasonable figure, I would suggest you look at your assumptions.
Z1 and Z2 should be included. - That's my feedback.For those on here: Simple MTTDL RAID Reliability Calculator - Beta. Would love feedback.
More insofar as you may add additional RAM modules which consume power. By the time you have a decent sized array, a few GB of RAM is a small factor. Perhaps a good discussion for another thread.One of my own questions is:
With RAID-Z(x) being so RAM intensive how big is the difference in power use between RAID 5/6 and Z1/Z2?
Seems obvious that Z1/Z2 would use more power, but how much more?
.
Depends on the kind of RAM.More insofar as you may add additional RAM modules which consume power. By the time you have a decent sized array, a few GB of RAM is a small factor. Perhaps a good discussion for another thread.
As I showed earlier with Z(x) calc' numbers compared to your calc' numbers the difference is about 50%.You are right that it is not exactly on for RAID-Z1 and RAID-Z2, but from what I was told by the reliability folks at a large storage vendor, for this type of model it is a close enough of an approximation to use RAID 5 and RAID 6.
I've been looking at Seagate/WD NAS type drives which all seem to be 1.0M MTBF.I've always assumed the "hard coded" 1.2M MTBF is because that was a common drive manufacturer spec along with the other options on that drop down. Well except for other because then you can put whatever you want in there. Maybe I'm wrong.
I'm also interested in this.Do you have the math behind what you're saying?
It is essentially what is in the article on it.@Patrick can you post the formula that's used in the calculator?
I know what you mean. After making the post I used google and found a paper with disk, psu/enclosure and different other failure rates in the mttdl formulaThe better models take into account more than just disk failures but are way more complex albeit more accurate.
Decent chance I spoke to that person.I know what you mean. After making the post I used google and found a paper with disk, psu/enclosure and different other failure rates in the mttdl formula