6

This morning, listening to Stack Overflow podcast #35 *, talking about Server, RAID controllers and Hard Drives, I heard this thing:

if you are going to buy Hard drives for your server, you would probably want to differentiate manufacturers because, buying them from the same productor, raise the level of risk that if one fails, the second have higher probability to die (for some sort of "faulty parts" affinity)

What do you think about that?
Is that a common practise from your experience?

*sorry but that part is missing on transcript

2 Answers 2

3

Well it's a balance, certainly there are very real scenarios from the past 20-30 years where there have been issues with a whole model, line or batch of disks that has meant one disk's failure was likely to be followed by another within quite short time scales and this should be a worry (especially in R5 configurations). At the same time if you're buying from one of the big players then there's a reasonable chance that they wouldn't support anything but their own supplied disks in a given machine, so swapping out some of the disks in that scenario brings with it its' own concern.

If you're building your own servers then obviously this isn't such an issue and it's not even that hard these days to find two disks from different manufacturers that have surprisingly similar performance characteristics - making this route less fraught.

I think a pragmatic approach when buying from the big players is to stick to as small a set of disk part numbers as possible across all of your machines and have a good amount of spares on site, decent support contracts in place and focus on your backup systems. We've done this by standardising on dual 147GB 10krpm 2.5 SAS disks for boot purposes - most of our systems don't need this much boot space but as >99% of our machine use them it's easy to have a big pile of them to hand.

Hope this helps.

1

For a RAID setup, it is a good idea. Just remember to buy similar size/performance disks, or the slower one(s) will hold up the faster one(s). And whatever you do, don't use RAID5.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .