Geekzone: technology news, blogs, forums
Guest
Welcome Guest.
You haven't logged in yet. If you don't have an account you can register now.


networkn

Networkn
32358 posts

Uber Geek

ID Verified
Trusted
Lifetime subscriber

#136249 20-Nov-2013 13:48
Send private message

Hi There!

We have been asked to investigate a 3 Server SQL Cluster setup. We think Shared Storage is the way to go, though the customers preference is IBM x3550 1U Servers (We prefer HP).  We don't need a lot of storage, Maybe 1TB in total usable. 

the V2700 IBM SAN looks a possible choice, and it appears to be connected via SAS. Will this be fast enough for SQL? The Environment is website hosting with about 200 <1GB DB's.

We were looking at SQL 2012 Features for this.

Any comments appreciated. 

Create new topic
wasabi2k
2096 posts

Uber Geek


  #937929 20-Nov-2013 14:43
Send private message

That SAN appears to be Fibre Channel - according to the spec sheet on the IBM site.

In which case you want an FC Switch too. How important is redunancy? Then 2 switches.
Need FC HBAs for each server - 2 ports if you do two fabrics.
What are you doing for DR? Active/Passive + DR Mirror?
What edition of SQL?
What underlying OS? 2008R2 or 2012.

IO is down to type of disk, number of spindles and controller throughput. How many disks? What type/size of disks?
What are your IO requirements? You can have a 1TB DB with low IO requirements or a 1GB database with massive IO requirements.

More information required.

Budget?




Ragnor
8223 posts

Uber Geek

Trusted

Regs
4066 posts

Uber Geek

Trusted
Snowflake

  #938238 20-Nov-2013 21:54
Send private message

what's the problem you're trying to solve with the clustering? performance or redundancy?

what's the budget?

with three clustered sql servers and small amounts of data (1TB), a pair of SSD drives in RAID-1 for each box might be a possible solution.

make sure you look at "SQL Server Always On" technology too - its the new HA option with SQL 2012 and one that MSFT is using across datacenters since beta sql 2012: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/sqlserver/solutions-technologies/mission-critical-operations/high-availability.aspx

enterprise class 800GB Intel SSD's run to $1500-$2000 each, 6 of them being $9000 to $12000. check this review: http://www.storagereview.com/intel_ssd_dc_s3500_enterprise_review

a SAN will normally set you back much more than that, and then you need to have fibre switches or 10Gbe interfaces to get good throughput. you'll need to get familiar with iscsi multipathing or fibre channel fabrics as well as understanding how to config/tweak the SAN you choose. you'll also get struggel to get the same IOPS of the SSD option.

depending on the goals - perf vs redundancy - perhaps you only need two clustered nodes with SSDs.




Create new topic





News and reviews »

Air New Zealand Starts AI adoption with OpenAI
Posted 24-Jul-2025 16:00


eero Pro 7 Review
Posted 23-Jul-2025 12:07


BeeStation Plus Review
Posted 21-Jul-2025 14:21


eero Unveils New Wi-Fi 7 Products in New Zealand
Posted 21-Jul-2025 00:01


WiZ Introduces HDMI Sync Box and other Light Devices
Posted 20-Jul-2025 17:32


RedShield Enhances DDoS and Bot Attack Protection
Posted 20-Jul-2025 17:26


Seagate Ships 30TB Drives
Posted 17-Jul-2025 11:24


Oclean AirPump A10 Water Flosser Review
Posted 13-Jul-2025 11:05


Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7: Raising the Bar for Smartphones
Posted 10-Jul-2025 02:01


Samsung Galaxy Z Flip7 Brings New Edge-To-Edge FlexWindow
Posted 10-Jul-2025 02:01


Epson Launches New AM-C550Z WorkForce Enterprise printer
Posted 9-Jul-2025 18:22


Samsung Releases Smart Monitor M9
Posted 9-Jul-2025 17:46


Nearly Half of Older Kiwis Still Write their Passwords on Paper
Posted 9-Jul-2025 08:42


D-Link 4G+ Cat6 Wi-Fi 6 DWR-933M Mobile Hotspot Review
Posted 1-Jul-2025 11:34


Oppo A5 Series Launches With New Levels of Durability
Posted 30-Jun-2025 10:15









Geekzone Live »

Try automatic live updates from Geekzone directly in your browser, without refreshing the page, with Geekzone Live now.



Are you subscribed to our RSS feed? You can download the latest headlines and summaries from our stories directly to your computer or smartphone by using a feed reader.