Path: utzoo!attcan!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!cs.utexas.edu!rice!rice!sun-spots-request From: jms@tardis.tymnet.com (Joe Smith) Newsgroups: comp.sys.sun Subject: Re: Multi-disk filesystems Keywords: Hardware Message-ID: <1990Aug5.165821.12167@rice.edu> Date: 3 Aug 90 19:56:17 GMT Sender: sun-spots-request@rice.edu Organization: Sun-Spots Lines: 37 Approved: Sun-Spots@rice.edu Originator: spots@titan.rice.edu X-Sun-Spots-Digest: Volume 9, Issue 292, message 4 X-Refs: Original: v9n278 In article <10174@brazos.Rice.edu> mp@allegra.tempo.nj.att.com (Mark Plotnick) writes: >Each filesystem is a full disk in size, but even these 1GB filesystems are >inconveniently small. I'd like to know of any products that let filesystems >span more than one physical drive. What we'd like to do is have 3 to 6 >disks treated as one filesystem. Ideally, the failure of one disk would not >necessitate restoring the others from tape. I don't know of a software solution, but Interphase Corporation displayed a hardware solution at the Sun Expo '90 in San Jose. They can provide a box that sits at the end of a SCSI bus that uses several disks to create the illusion of one giant disk. They have an article in "The Sun Observer", page 60 of the July 1990 issue. It mentions how "spanning" allows a single partition to be larger than a full disk. They also had a session describing the advantages of "striping", where the host's I/O request is split into several parts, each going to a different drive. For instance, a SunOS request for 8K bytes could be split into 4 requests of two 1K byte blocks each, and read/written from/to 4 drives in parallel. Sustained thruput is 4 times that of a single disk. Another way to go is to separate the individual bits. Interphase described one product has five 1GB disks but acts like a single 4GB disk. Incoming data is split, with 1/4th of the bits going to drive 1, 1/4th to drive 2, 1/4th to drive 3, and the rest to drive 4. Drive 5 provides parity for the other 4 bits. There is enough redundancy that it can survive the complete failure of a single disk. As long as a replacement disk can be hooked up and made up-to-date before a second disk fails, then no data will be lost. I'm sure other companies are working on similar products. Interphase Corporation is at 13800 Senlac, Dallas, TX 75234 (214)919-9000. I am not a customer, I just listened to them at Sun Expo. Joe Smith (408)922-6220 | SMTP: jms@tardis.tymnet.com or jms@gemini.tymnet.com BT Tymnet Tech Services | UUCP: ...!{ames,pyramid}!oliveb!tymix!tardis!jms PO Box 49019, MS-C41 | BIX: smithjoe | 12 PDP-10s still running! "POPJ P," San Jose, CA 95161-9019 | humorous dislaimer: "My Amiga speaks for me."