[Beowulf] what defines "enterprise class" hard drives?
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Sabuj Pattanayek sabujp at gmail.comThu Aug 5 15:57:00 PDT 2010
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Hi, For SATA drives, my take is that if it has a 3YR warranty then it's a consumer line drive. If it has a 5YR warranty from the manufacturer then I consider it an "enterprise" class drive, even if it's not branded as such. That being said, I think I saw some western digital black drives with 5YR warranties (on newegg) that are not branded as "enterprise" so they don't cost twice as much. However, there are (or at least used to be) features of enterprise class drives which are not available on the consumer line of drives. Whether or not these features are necessary for operation on your brand of storage array is something you should check. The good companies that make storage arrays have a matrix/list of drives+firmware versions that they've tested and qualified for use with their arrays. If your array is a bunch of rack servers, make sure the controllers will accept non-branded/certified drives (e.g. make sure it doesn't require a Dell, HP, or IBM branded drive). After having determine that your array will take COTS components, and if you can go with slightly slower drives, I'd go with the WD Caviar green series, black if you want something faster. I'd stay away from the really cheap 5400 RPM Seagate drives. On Thu, Aug 5, 2010 at 5:33 PM, Jon Forrest <jlforrest at berkeley.edu> wrote: > On 8/5/2010 2:47 PM, Rahul Nabar wrote: >> >> I wanted to buy some 1 Terabyte SATA drives for our storage array and >> wanted to stay away from the cheap desktop stuff. But each >> manufacturer has some "enterprise class drives". But is there >> something specific to look for? Most of those seem to have a MTBF of >> around 1.2 million hours and a URE of about 1 in 10^15. The S.M.A.R.T. >> abilities seem fairly standard. Is there a list somewhere of well >> tested drives? Or any recommendations?
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