--- On Sat, 22/11/08, Scott Marlowe <scott.marlowe@gmail.com> wrote:
> You really have two choices. First is to try and use it as
> a plain
> SCSI card, maybe with caching turned on, and do the raid in
> software.
> Second is to cut it into pieces and make jewelry out of it.
Haha, I'm not really into jewelry, although I had thought of smacking it into a pile of dust with a lump hammer, that's
muchmore my thing.
> Anything
> before the Perc 6 series is seriously brain damaged, and
> the Perc6
> brings the dell raid array line squarly in line with a 5
> year old LSI
> megaraid, give or take. And that's being generous.
>
Well this card thinks it's a 5 year old lsi megaraid. I've got a pile of perc5i megaraid paperweights on my desk at
work,so this was kinda expected really.
> > I've tried writeback and write through modes,
> tried changing cache flush times, disabled and enabled
> multiple PCI delayed transactions, all seem to have little
> effect.
>
> Yeah, it's like trying to performance tune a yugo.
>
Did I mention I drive a yugo?
> > Finally I decided to wave goodbye to Dell's
> firmware. LSI has it down as a MegaRAID 493 elite 1600, so I
> flashed it with their latest firmware. Doesn't seem to
> have helped either though.
>
> Does it have a battery backup module? Often you can't
> really turn on
> write-back without one. That would certainly slow things
> down. But
> you should certainly expect > 20 M/s on a modern RAID
> controller
> writing out to a 4 disk RAID10
>
Yeah the battery's on it, that and the 128Mb is really the only reason I thought I'd give it a whirl.