Hi,
So far I've always made use of SATA drives when buying my servers. I've always been in need of more space and I figured, because it is cheaper, why not go with it. After doing some reading on the internet ever since and with my current aspirations of starting a good filesharing service, I'm wondering though whether the difference in the two is really noticable?
My current setup for the frontend exists of:
SATA drives (no raid)
8 GB of 16 GB RAM (I make use of cloudlinux, so I can always assign more RAM if needed)
Litespeed
And I'm now about to buy a separate server for the fileserver.
I was thinking of going for a lot of space, considering SD drives sure are more expensive and I'd need 6 SD servers for what I could get with 1 SATA server. What would those of you with the experience recommend?
SATA drives for both servers? SD for frontend and SATA for fileserver?
I appreciate your help!
XFileSharing Pro - SATA vs SD
- PilgrimX182
- Posts: 2186
- Joined: Mar 22, 2006 1:39 pm
Use SATA only for fileservers. SSD drives are too small for filesharing.
For MAIN server better use SCSI or 10k rpm SATA drives for best DB perfomance. I don't trust DB on SSD since DB have much writes and SSD don't like this and can go down. But RAID1xSSD is really good config
16GB RAM for fileservers is OK.
For MAIN server better use SCSI or 10k rpm SATA drives for best DB perfomance. I don't trust DB on SSD since DB have much writes and SSD don't like this and can go down. But RAID1xSSD is really good config
16GB RAM for fileservers is OK.
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Oct 01, 2010 5:13 pm
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- Posts: 7
- Joined: May 03, 2011 9:59 am
admin I would like ask you, let say one dedicated server is big huge fileserve with 16GB ram and hard drive sata with 5x2TBPilgrimX182 wrote:Use SATA only for fileservers. SSD drives are too small for filesharing.
For MAIN server better use SCSI or 10k rpm SATA drives for best DB perfomance. I don't trust DB on SSD since DB have much writes and SSD don't like this and can go down. But RAID1xSSD is really good config
16GB RAM for fileservers is OK.
this is will be one file server or will be separate by vps virtualization?
You do not want to use VPS virtualization for such situations, or any situation for that matter. If it is for yourself it would be a pure waste of the hardware.maestrohost wrote:admin I would like ask you, let say one dedicated server is big huge fileserve with 16GB ram and hard drive sata with 5x2TBPilgrimX182 wrote:Use SATA only for fileservers. SSD drives are too small for filesharing.
For MAIN server better use SCSI or 10k rpm SATA drives for best DB perfomance. I don't trust DB on SSD since DB have much writes and SSD don't like this and can go down. But RAID1xSSD is really good config
16GB RAM for fileservers is OK.
this is will be one file server or will be separate by vps virtualization?
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- Posts: 7
- Joined: May 03, 2011 9:59 am
so do you think all in one fileserver mate?komi wrote:You do not want to use VPS virtualization for such situations, or any situation for that matter. If it is for yourself it would be a pure waste of the hardware.maestrohost wrote:admin I would like ask you, let say one dedicated server is big huge fileserve with 16GB ram and hard drive sata with 5x2TBPilgrimX182 wrote:Use SATA only for fileservers. SSD drives are too small for filesharing.
For MAIN server better use SCSI or 10k rpm SATA drives for best DB perfomance. I don't trust DB on SSD since DB have much writes and SSD don't like this and can go down. But RAID1xSSD is really good config
16GB RAM for fileservers is OK.
this is will be one file server or will be separate by vps virtualization?
Of course. Why do you think about virtualization in the first place? o_Omaestrohost wrote:so do you think all in one fileserver mate?komi wrote:You do not want to use VPS virtualization for such situations, or any situation for that matter. If it is for yourself it would be a pure waste of the hardware.maestrohost wrote: admin I would like ask you, let say one dedicated server is big huge fileserve with 16GB ram and hard drive sata with 5x2TB
this is will be one file server or will be separate by vps virtualization?
agree completelyPilgrimX182 wrote:Use SATA only for fileservers. SSD drives are too small for filesharing.
For MAIN server better use SCSI or 10k rpm SATA drives for best DB perfomance. I don't trust DB on SSD since DB have much writes and SSD don't like this and can go down. But RAID1xSSD is really good config
16GB RAM for fileservers is OK.
Thank you for all of the replies!
I'll do away my old servers and I'll go with the 100TB server from Leaseweb:
16 GB
4 x 1TB RAID5 (only option really )
1 GB uplink
As for the main server.. I'm still undecided what to go with. I was going to use cloudlinux and set a standard amount of RAM for my frontend... but now I'm having second thoughts. The server is on a 100mbps connection and there will be a lot of other sites hosted as well .
Also, I've read in some of the older topics, that you can have a seperate server for the frontend (site) and for the database files?
Is that correct? And if so, how can you do that?
I'm also looking now at Rackspace for Cloud Servers. I know it is more expensive storage/bandwidth/ram wise, but it also seems to be more secure and faster than a normal dedicated server.
The thing is, I'm not entirely certain what kind of server (file/main) uses what kind of resources.
Isn't it the fileservers that should be the best as far as optimization and/or specs go? Or should the mainserver have a lot of of RAM available as well?
I'll do away my old servers and I'll go with the 100TB server from Leaseweb:
16 GB
4 x 1TB RAID5 (only option really )
1 GB uplink
As for the main server.. I'm still undecided what to go with. I was going to use cloudlinux and set a standard amount of RAM for my frontend... but now I'm having second thoughts. The server is on a 100mbps connection and there will be a lot of other sites hosted as well .
Also, I've read in some of the older topics, that you can have a seperate server for the frontend (site) and for the database files?
Is that correct? And if so, how can you do that?
I'm also looking now at Rackspace for Cloud Servers. I know it is more expensive storage/bandwidth/ram wise, but it also seems to be more secure and faster than a normal dedicated server.
The thing is, I'm not entirely certain what kind of server (file/main) uses what kind of resources.
Isn't it the fileservers that should be the best as far as optimization and/or specs go? Or should the mainserver have a lot of of RAM available as well?
The 100 tb server is a good fileserver. Fileservers need ram and disc space, this server can easily serve 1000+ simulatinous downloaders with nginx. It has a nice price and leaseweb has a good network too.Guneyd wrote:Thank you for all of the replies!
I'll do away my old servers and I'll go with the 100TB server from Leaseweb:
16 GB
4 x 1TB RAID5 (only option really )
1 GB uplink
As for the main server.. I'm still undecided what to go with. I was going to use cloudlinux and set a standard amount of RAM for my frontend... but now I'm having second thoughts. The server is on a 100mbps connection and there will be a lot of other sites hosted as well .
Also, I've read in some of the older topics, that you can have a seperate server for the frontend (site) and for the database files?
Is that correct? And if so, how can you do that?
I'm also looking now at Rackspace for Cloud Servers. I know it is more expensive storage/bandwidth/ram wise, but it also seems to be more secure and faster than a normal dedicated server.
The thing is, I'm not entirely certain what kind of server (file/main) uses what kind of resources.
Isn't it the fileservers that should be the best as far as optimization and/or specs go? Or should the mainserver have a lot of of RAM available as well?
For the main server, don't go for cloud stuff or whatever, but simply get a dualcore from leaseweb. for 50 e (ex tax) you can get the Intel G6950/4GB/2x250GB (DC38) which can probably serve up to 50000 or more downloaders per day. Or get any similar dual-core server with at least software raid 1 and 1 gb+ of ram
If you think about getting a seperate database server, don't do it right away since it costs money. (They need a private lan too). From my experience a single I7 can run a 100,000 visitors a day wordpress blog and xfs is a lot lighter than wordpress.
Dont recommand you to get only 1 file server, take 2 of them but not just 100TB coz it is expensive. Take smaller server for half money and take 2 of them to split your traffic and speed. Trust me it will be much much better. At least 16 GB of ram should do it. Not even nginx needed in this case.nyan wrote:The 100 tb server is a good fileserver. Fileservers need ram and disc space, this server can easily serve 1000+ simulatinous downloaders with nginx. It has a nice price and leaseweb has a good network too.Guneyd wrote:Thank you for all of the replies!
I'll do away my old servers and I'll go with the 100TB server from Leaseweb:
16 GB
4 x 1TB RAID5 (only option really )
1 GB uplink
As for the main server.. I'm still undecided what to go with. I was going to use cloudlinux and set a standard amount of RAM for my frontend... but now I'm having second thoughts. The server is on a 100mbps connection and there will be a lot of other sites hosted as well .
Also, I've read in some of the older topics, that you can have a seperate server for the frontend (site) and for the database files?
Is that correct? And if so, how can you do that?
I'm also looking now at Rackspace for Cloud Servers. I know it is more expensive storage/bandwidth/ram wise, but it also seems to be more secure and faster than a normal dedicated server.
The thing is, I'm not entirely certain what kind of server (file/main) uses what kind of resources.
Isn't it the fileservers that should be the best as far as optimization and/or specs go? Or should the mainserver have a lot of of RAM available as well?
For the main server, don't go for cloud stuff or whatever, but simply get a dualcore from leaseweb. for 50 e (ex tax) you can get the Intel G6950/4GB/2x250GB (DC38) which can probably serve up to 50000 or more downloaders per day. Or get any similar dual-core server with at least software raid 1 and 1 gb+ of ram
If you think about getting a seperate database server, don't do it right away since it costs money. (They need a private lan too). From my experience a single I7 can run a 100,000 visitors a day wordpress blog and xfs is a lot lighter than wordpress.