Solaris Volume Manager Administration Guide

Choosing Storage Mechanisms

Before you implement your storage management approach, you need to decide what kinds of storage devices to use. This set of guidelines compares the various storage mechanisms to help you choose. Additional sets of guidelines apply to specific storage mechanisms as implemented in Solaris Volume Manager. See specific chapters about each volume type for details.


Note –

The storage mechanisms that are listed here are not mutually exclusive. You can use these volumes in combination to meet multiple goals. For example, you could first create a RAID 1 volume for redundancy. Next, you could create soft partitions on the RAID 1 volume to increase the number of discrete file systems that are possible.


Table 2–1 Choosing Storage Mechanisms

Requirements 

RAID 0 (Concatenation) 

RAID 0 (Stripe) 

RAID 1 (Mirror) 

RAID 5 

Soft Partitions 

Redundant data 

No 

No 

Yes 

Yes 

No 

Improved read performance 

No 

Yes 

Depends on underlying device 

Yes 

No 

Improved write performance 

No 

Yes 

No 

No 

No 

More than 8 slices per device 

No 

No 

No 

No 

Yes 

Larger available storage space 

Yes 

Yes 

No 

Yes 

No 

Table 2–2 Optimizing Redundant Storage

 

RAID 1 (Mirror) 

RAID 5 

Write operations 

Faster 

Slower 

Random read 

Faster 

Slower 

Hardware cost 

Higher 

Lower 


Note –

In addition to these generic storage options, see Hot Spare Pools for more information about using Solaris Volume Manager to support redundant devices.